Pacific National Investments Ltd. v. Victoria (City), [2000]
2 S.C.R. 919
Pacific National Investments Ltd. Appellant
v.
The Corporation of the City of
Victoria Respondent
and between
The Corporation of the City of
Victoria Appellant
v.
Pacific National Investments
Ltd. Respondent
Indexed as: Pacific National Investments Ltd. v.
Victoria (City)
Neutral citation: 2000 SCC 64.
File No.: 27006.
2000: May 25; 2000: December 14.
Present: Gonthier, Iacobucci, Major, Bastarache, Binnie,
Arbour and LeBel JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for british columbia
Municipal law ‑‑ Zoning ‑‑
Development of lands ‑‑ Developer suing municipality for
breach of contract following “down‑zoning” of lots ‑‑ Whether
municipality liable to pay damages under implied contractual term that
municipality would not rezone before expiration of reasonable period of time ‑‑
Whether implied term ultra vires and contrary to public policy ‑‑
Whether implied term illegally fettering municipality’s discretionary
legislative powers.
Land titles ‑‑ Subdivision of land ‑‑
Transfer of title to Crown ‑‑ Land title legislation providing in
certain circumstances for a deemed transfer of title to Crown and
extinguishment of fee simple ‑‑ Water lots part of subdivided area
on subdivision plan ‑‑ Whether land title legislation applicable to
any subdivided land or only to adjoining land ‑‑ Land Title Act,
R.S.B.C. 1979, c. 219, s. 108(2).
In 1987, the respondent City and BCEC, a Crown
corporation, signed an umbrella agreement (“Master Agreement”) to
redevelop certain lands located around the City’s harbour. Under the Master
Agreement, BCEC would develop “Phase I” and would sell the “Phase II” area.
The Master Agreement was authorized by City Council and was registered as a
restrictive covenant under s. 215 of the Land Title Act. The
appellant developer (“PNI”) entered into an agreement to purchase the
Phase II area from BCEC. The agreement was binding only if the City granted
the subdivision of the lands and passed the requisite zoning, which it did. In
1988, PNI deposited the subdivision plan. It developed and sold three lots but
when PNI’s plans for the development of the two water lots became known,
objections were raised to the transformation of the harbourfront. These plans
included three‑storey buildings, restaurants and other commercial
establishments. City Council decided to rezone the water lots so as to prevent
additional residential development and to restrict the height of the
buildings. PNI sued for breach of contract and maintained that this “down‑zoning”
was in breach of the City’s implied obligations under the Master Agreement and
thus in breach of PNI’s rights as successor to BCEC under the Master
Agreement. In the alternative, it claimed restitution for unjust enrichment
for the parks and other amenities that it had constructed and which the City
would benefit from. The trial judge found the City liable for breach of
contract. The Court of Appeal set aside the judgment and remitted the matter
for trial on the remaining issue of restitution for unjust enrichment.
Held (Major, Bastarache
and Binnie JJ. dissenting on the appeal): The appeal and the cross‑appeal
should be dismissed.
(1) Cross‑appeal
The City’s argument that PNI did not own the
water lots must fail. Section 108(2) of the Land Title Act did not
vest these lots in the Province when PNI deposited its subdivision plan at the
land titles office. Given its clear confiscatory effect, s. 108(2)
should be strictly construed. The section is not concerned with the lots
created through subdivision but with other areas within the titled land that
amount to remainders. On this interpretation, the water lots do not fall
within the scope of s. 108(2) since they are part of the subdivided area
on the subdivision plan and are in no way remainders.
(2) Appeal
Per Gonthier,
Iacobucci, Arbour and LeBel JJ.: Under the provincial legislation, the City
did not have the capacity to make and be bound by an implied term to keep the
zoning in place for a number of years and to pay damages if it modified
it. Section 963 of the Municipal Act provides for the power to zone by
by-law. On its face, the statute provides for no power to constrain the future
use of this legislative power and the legislature has generally considered that
municipalities should not pay compensation for how they use this legislative
power. These principles all militate against PNI’s case from the outset. Nor
can PNI find the capacity it seeks through s. 215 of the Land Title Act
or through s. 980(5) of the Municipal Act. Under s. 215(3),
although the BCEC covenant in favour of the City was registered, the City is
not bound to keep zoning that would allow BCEC or its successor PNI to fulfill
its plans. Section 215(3) was clearly intended to provide that a
covenant was still binding on the covenantor, even when the covenantee had not
signed it. Section 980(5), which provided that a development permit was
binding on the municipality once issued and might even prevent rezoning, has
no application in this case since PNI did not have a development permit for the
water lots. Lastly, a comparison with the prior and subsequent legislative
schemes in B.C. makes it clear that under the legislation applicable at the
time of the events in this case, implied terms such as the one alleged by PNI
were without any statutory authorization. B.C. abolished the land use
contracts system enabling municipalities to commit to particular zoning by
contract in 1978, and it is only in 1993 that B.C. municipalities were
permitted to request amenities in exchange for zoning. As well, prior to 1998,
although municipalities could enter into long‑term commitments related to
their business and proprietary powers under the Municipal Act, these
commitments were subject to the statute’s close controls.
Moreover, while a municipality may engage in
business and proprietary contracts, it cannot agree to terms that fetter its
legislative power unless there is legislation expressing a public policy
permitting it to do so. In this respect, s. 19 of the Municipal Act
does not provide the statutory basis for a municipality to enter into
long‑term agreements with a developer about the exercise of its zoning
powers. The distinction between indirect and direct fettering cannot be
accepted as it is likely without any legal basis. The supposed
distinction is also unhelpful in rationalizing the case law and, more
importantly, is inconsistent with the principles that undergird this area of
the law. Here, the alleged implied term would have been an illegal fetter on
the municipality’s discretionary legislative powers.
The wording of the legislation, its history,
consistent case law, and established public policy against municipalities being
bound in ways that constrain their legislative powers all support the
conclusion that the City had no implied or express powers to agree to an
implied term such as the one PNI has alleged. Whether such an implied term
might or might not have made sense for business efficiency reasons, any such
term was ultra vires and contrary to legislatively established public
policy.
Per Major, Bastarache
and Binnie JJ. (dissenting): Based on an analysis of the Master Agreement
and the relevant external documentary evidence, and from all of the
circumstances of this case, it can be concluded that the contract contained the
implied term not to rezone for a reasonable time. Zoning was an essential pre‑condition
of the Master Agreement. The implied term does not bind the City from
rezoning for any length of time: it simply recognizes that in consideration of
PNI’s initial investment, a change in zoning must be offset by compensation.
It would be contrary to business sense and to all obligations of fairness to
conclude that the condition precedent regarding zoning had to be met but was not
protected in any way from unilateral retraction. While the parties did not
agree to a bare term preventing the City from down‑zoning, since it is
acknowledged that they were cognizant of the rule against binding future
councils, they carefully arranged the contract as an innovative means of
achieving the parties’ differing objectives by hinging binding obligations on
each piece going into place. The implied term must be present to give the
contract business efficacy. In view of the condition precedent in the
contract, an officious bystander would necessarily hold the view that the City
believed it would owe compensation in the event it down‑zoned without the
passage of a reasonable time.
Although a municipality cannot be held liable for
breaching a term that is ultra vires, in this case the implied term in
the Master Agreement not to rezone for a reasonable time is intra vires
the City. The general municipal power to contract in furtherance of
municipal objectives is a solid basis for the City’s authority to agree to the
zoning commitments in the Master Agreement. Sections 19(1) and 963
(read in conjunction with s. 287) of the Municipal Act establish
that the subject matter of the implied term was within the City’s
jurisdiction. The express power to contract for materials and services,
coupled with the municipality’s power to zone, provided the City with the
authority to agree to a contract that contained a term which temporarily
maintains zoning. Even if the authorization did not flow directly from these
provisions, this power would necessarily or fairly be implied under these
express powers. Significantly, the City conceded that the Master Agreement was
lawful despite being unable to identify a specific statutory basis which
granted it the authority to enter into this type of contract. Finally, a
review of the history of zoning power in British Columbia confirms that in
1987, the City had the power to agree to the term that the City would not
rezone for a reasonable time. The repeal in 1978 of s. 702A of
the Municipal Act did not signify that the City gained the power to
exercise the discretion to rezone, in violation of a lawful contract, with no
consequences. The repeal of s. 702A removed the right of municipalities
to enter contracts where specific performance was guaranteed but did not
prevent them from entering long‑term development contracts.
The implied term of the Master Agreement does not
offend against public policy. The well‑established rule that a city
council does not have the authority to fetter the ability of a future council
to exercise its legislative power is not violated by the implied term of the
Master Agreement since the agreement does not restrict the City’s authority to
rezone. A distinction must be made between preventing council from exercising
its legislative discretion and requiring it to consider its contractual
obligations before exercising that discretion. To require a municipal council
to consider its contractual obligations does not violate public policy but
promotes the public interest. Councils are free to legislate as they like, but
they cannot ignore the contractual obligations that they owe. Having
such an indirect fetter does not subject the municipal legislative process to
undue influence or embarrassment. It is sound policy to allow
municipalities to enter complex, long‑term development contracts which
provide developers with a promise that existing zoning will continue for a
period sufficient to allow for development. In this case, there is no
direct fettering of the municipality’s legislative power and there is no reason
to fear that the duty to pay damages will affect in a detrimental way the
public interest in preserving the legislative independence of all municipal
governments.
In sum, where a municipality enters a contract with a
legitimate purpose, that contract must be honoured. The City should not be
able to terminate with impunity a contract that it uniquely crafted,
thoughtfully entered into, received the full benefit of, and concedes is
lawful. Here, PNI spent over $2.5 million on infrastructure upgrades in
anticipation of the commercial development that would result from the land
transfer and zoning provided for in the contract. The public interest would not
be served by allowing the City to escape its commitments. PNI is entitled to
damages for breach of contract. Awarding compensation does not amount to a
fettering of the municipal power over zoning that adversely affects the
public’s interest in local government.
Cases Cited
By LeBel J.
Distinguished: Wells
v. Newfoundland, [1999] 3 S.C.R. 199; referred to: Vancouver v.
Registrar Vancouver Land Registration District, [1955] 2 D.L.R. 709; Ingledew’s
Ltd. v. City of Vancouver (1967), 61 D.L.R. (2d) 41; Leiriao v. Val‑Bélair
(Town), [1991] 3 S.C.R. 349; Hongkong Bank of Canada v. Wheeler Holdings
Ltd., [1993] 1 S.C.R. 167; M.J.B. Enterprises Ltd. v. Defence
Construction (1951) Ltd., [1999] 1 S.C.R. 619; Canadian Pacific Hotels
Ltd. v. Bank of Montreal, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 711; Immeubles Port Louis Ltée
v. Lafontaine (Village), [1991] 1 S.C.R. 326; Public School Boards’
Assn. of Alberta v. Alberta (Attorney General), [2000] 2 S.C.R. 409, 2000
SCC 45; Nanaimo (City) v. Rascal Trucking Ltd., [2000] 1 S.C.R. 342,
2000 SCC 13; R. v. Greenbaum, [1993] 1 S.C.R. 674; R. v. Sharma,
[1993] 1 S.C.R. 650; City of Vancouver v. B.C. Telephone Co., [1951]
S.C.R. 3; Martin Corp. v. West Vancouver (District) (1993), 85
B.C.L.R. (2d) 305; Re Walmar Investments Ltd. and City of North Bay,
[1970] 1 O.R. 109; Lawrason v. Town of Dundas (1920), 18 O.W.N. 22; Birkdale
District Electric Supply Co. v. Corporation of Southport, [1926] A.C. 355; Town
of Eastview v. Roman Catholic Episcopal Corporation of Ottawa (1918), 44
O.L.R. 284; Capital Regional District v. District of Saanich (1980), 115
D.L.R. (3d) 596; Re Galt‑Canadian Woodworking Machinery Ltd. and City
of Cambridge (1982), 135 D.L.R. (3d) 58, aff’d (1983), 146 D.L.R. (3d) 768;
Kendrick v. Nelson (City) (1997), 31 B.C.L.R. (3d) 134; Attorney‑General
for New Brunswick v. Saint John, [1948] 3 D.L.R. 693, leave to
appeal granted, [1948] 3 D.L.R. 851; Walker v. Mayor of St. John (1872),
14 N.B.R. 143; Wall and Redekop Corp. v. City of Vancouver (1974), 16
N.R. 436, aff’d (1976), 16 N.R. 435; Dowty Boulton Paul Ltd. v.
Wolverhampton Corp., [1971] 2 All E.R. 277; Shell Canada Products Ltd.
v. Vancouver (City), [1994] 1 S.C.R. 231; William Cory & Son Ltd. v.
London Corp., [1951] 2 K.B. 476.
By Bastarache J. (dissenting on appeal)
M.J.B. Enterprises Ltd. v. Defence Construction
(1951) Ltd., [1999] 1 S.C.R. 619; Nanaimo (City)
v. Rascal Trucking Ltd., [2000] 1 S.C.R. 342, 2000 SCC 13; R. v. Sharma,
[1993] 1 S.C.R. 650; The King v. Dominion of Canada Postage Stamp Vending
Co., [1930] S.C.R. 500; R. v. Greenbaum, [1993] 1 S.C.R. 674; Kendrick
v. Nelson (City) (1997), 31 B.C.L.R. (3d) 134; Wells v. Newfoundland,
[1999] 3 S.C.R. 199; Re Cressey Development Corp. and Township of Richmond
(1982), 132 D.L.R. (3d) 166; Shell Canada Products Ltd. v. Vancouver (City),
[1994] 1 S.C.R. 231; Vancouver v. Registrar Vancouver Land Registration
District, [1955] 2 D.L.R. 709; Ingledew’s Ltd. v. City of Vancouver
(1967), 61 D.L.R. (2d) 41; Town of Eastview v. Roman Catholic Episcopal
Corporation of Ottawa (1918), 44 O.L.R. 284; Walker v. Mayor of St. John
(1872), 14 N.B.R. 143; Attorney‑General for New Brunswick v. Saint
John, [1948] 3 D.L.R. 693; First City Development Corp. v. Durham
(Regional Municipality) (1989), 41 M.P.L.R. 241; Stourcliffe Estates Co.
v. Bournemouth Corp., [1908‑10] All E.R. 785; Dowty Boulton Paul
Ltd. v. Wolverhampton Corp., [1971] 2 All E.R. 277; Lawrason v. Town of
Dundas (1920), 18 O.W.N. 22; Muskoka Mall Ltd. v. Town of Huntsville
(1977), 3 M.P.L.R. 279; Re Galt‑Canadian Woodworking Machinery Ltd.
and City of Cambridge (1982), 135 D.L.R. (3d) 58, aff’d (1983), 146 D.L.R.
(3d) 768.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Act to Amend the Municipal Act, S.B.C. 1971, c. 38, s. 52.
Land Title Act, R.S.B.C. 1979, c. 219, ss. 23(1) [am. 1982, c. 60, s.
3], 108(2) [idem, s. 25(a)], 215 [idem, s. 58; am.
1989, c. 69, s. 22].
Land Title Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 250, s. 108(2).
Local Elections Reform Act, 1993, S.B.C.
1993, c. 54, s. 23.
Local Government Statutes
Amendment Act, 1998, S.B.C. 1998, c. 34,
preamble.
Municipal Act, R.S.B.C. 1960, c. 255, ss. 702A [ad. 1968, c. 33, s.
166; am. 1970, c. 29, s. 21; rep. & sub. 1971, c. 38, s. 52; am.
1972, c. 36, s. 28; am. 1972 (2nd Sess.), c. 9, s. 1; rep. 1977,
c. 57, s. 13(1)], 702AA [ad. idem, s. 13(2)].
Municipal Act, R.S.B.C. 1979, c. 290, ss. 19, 287, 290 [am. 1993,
c. 41, s. 32], 292, 313, 321 [rep. & sub. 1993, c. 54,
s. 23], 322 [am. 1980, c. 50, s. 63; am. 1982, c. 76,
s. 28; am. 1987, c. 38, s. 4], 344(1), 717 [rep. 1985,
c. 79, s. 4], 963 [ad. idem, s. 8; am. 1987, c. 14,
s. 27], 963.1(2) [ad. 1993, c. 58, s. 4; am. 1994, c. 43,
s. 71], 972 [ad. 1985, c. 79, s. 8], 976 [idem], 980(5) [idem],
(6) [idem], 982 [idem], 989(4) [ad. 1987, c. 14,
s. 45(e)].
Municipal Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 323, ss. 176, 903.
Municipal Affairs, Recreation
and Housing Statutes Amendment Act, 1993, S.B.C.
1993, c. 58, s. 4.
Municipal Amendment Act, 1977, S.B.C.
1977, c. 57, s. 13.
Municipal Amendment Act, 1985, S.B.C.
1985, c. 79, ss. 4, 8.
Authors Cited
British
Columbia. Debates of the Legislative Assembly, vol. 6, 2nd Sess.
31st Parl., August 8, 1977, pp. 4353‑54.
Côté, Pierre‑André. The
Interpretation of Legislation in Canada, 3rd ed. Scarborough, Ont.:
Carswell, 2000.
Hétu, Jean, Yvon Duplessis et
Dennis Pakenham. Droit municipal: Principes généraux et contentieux.
Montréal: Hébert Denault, 1998.
Hogg, Peter W. Liability
of the Crown, 2nd ed. Toronto: Carswell, 1989.
Jones, David Phillip, and
Anne S. de Villars. Principles of Administrative Law, 3rd ed.
Scarborough, Ont.: Carswell, 1999.
Macaulay, Robert W., and
Robert G. Doumani. Ontario Land Development: Legislation and Practice,
vol. 1. Scarborough, Ont.: Carswell, 1995 (loose‑leaf updated
1999, release 3).
Rogers, Ian MacFee. Canadian
Law of Planning and Zoning. Toronto: Carswell, 1973 (loose‑leaf
updated 2000, release 3).
Rogers, Ian MacFee. The Law of
Canadian Municipal Corporations, 2nd ed. Toronto: Carswell, 1971 (loose‑leaf
updated 2000, release 3).
Waddams, S. M. The Law of
Contracts, 3rd ed. Toronto: Canada Law Book, 1993.
APPEAL and CROSS‑APPEAL from a judgment of the
British Columbia Court of Appeal (1998), 58 B.C.L.R. (3d) 390, 165 D.L.R. (4th)
577, [1999] 7 W.W.R. 265, 112 B.C.A.C. 161, 182 W.A.C. 161, 1 M.P.L.R. (3d) 58,
[1998] B.C.J. No. 2302 (QL), allowing the city’s appeal from a decision of the
British Columbia Supreme Court, [1996] B.C.J. No. 2523 (QL). Appeal dismissed,
Major, Bastarache, and Binnie JJ. dissenting. Cross‑appeal dismissed.
L. John Alexander
and Charles Edward Hanman, for the appellant/respondent on cross‑appeal.
Guy McDannold, for the
respondent/appellant on cross‑appeal.
The judgment of Gonthier, Iacobucci, Arbour and LeBel
JJ. was delivered by
LeBel J. –
I. Introduction
1
Land law may look like a dry, forbidding, and not very fashionable
subject. Sometimes, however, it involves broad issues of policy and the
principles of municipal governance, as will be found in the present appeal.
2
This case concerns land in and around Victoria’s Inner Harbour. The
parties argued vigorously over a question that ultimately amounted to whether
the City of Victoria could sell zoning for, or at least commit itself to a
freeze in the zoning of, a particular piece of property. They also discussed
the application of an obscure subsection of the Land Title Act, R.S.B.C.
1979, c. 219, s. 108(2), the effect of which could have deprived the respondent
on the cross-appeal of any interest in the property. After tracing the factual
background of the case and the judgments below, I turn to these questions and
to why both the appeal and the cross-appeal must be dismissed. Indeed, I
conclude that any decision otherwise would go against the wording, history, and
object of British Columbia’s land titles and municipal government legislation
and would potentially threaten longstanding principles of municipal law
jurisprudence.
II. Factual
Background
3
From 1911 until the 1970s, the “Songhees lands” located around
Victoria’s Inner Harbour had been used for industrial purposes by various
parties who leased them from the Province of British Columbia. In the 1980s,
the Province became interested in redeveloping the area. The Province and the
City of Victoria engaged in discussions, and the City published a concept plan
in 1984. In 1986, the Province shifted control of the land to the Crown
corporation that would become the British Columbia Enterprise Corporation
(“BCEC”).
4
On August 28, 1987, the City and BCEC signed an umbrella agreement
called the “Songhees Master Agreement” (“Master Agreement”). Under the Master
Agreement, BCEC would itself develop some of the lands in a part of the
development called “Phase I”, and it would sell other land consisting of some
22 acres to a private developer in a part of the development called “Phase II”.
The City Council shortly thereafter gave its official authorization to the
Master Agreement at a Council meeting. The Master Agreement was registered as
a restrictive covenant under s. 215 of the Land Title Act, presumably,
as explained in oral argument, in order that BCEC would subject itself to the
City’s legislative powers over land use (from which, as part of the provincial
government, it would ordinarily be exempt).
5
Contemporaneously with these events, after two years of planning,
Pacific National Investments Ltd. (“PNI”) was negotiating with BCEC to buy the
Phase II area in order that it could construct a commercial and residential
development on this land. Under the purchase agreement, PNI would take over
BCEC’s rights and obligations under the Master Agreement as successor to BCEC.
This meant that PNI would fulfill BCEC’s commitments, among others, with
respect to providing for roads, parkland, a seawall, and walking paths. PNI
envisioned its development as eventually including three-storey structures on
platforms on two proposed water lots within the Phase II area. As found by the
trial judge ([1996] B.C.J. No. 2523 (QL), at para. 22), what PNI would pay for
the land obviously depended on what kinds of developments it might have the opportunity
to undertake. PNI’s agreement to purchase the land from BCEC was binding only
if the City granted the subdivision of the Phase II land into five lots and
passed the requisite zoning.
6
The City granted the subdivision and passed the zoning that would give
PNI an opportunity to develop the land as it envisioned, this zoning permitting
three-storey structures with mixed commercial and residential uses on the
proposed water lots. In 1988, PNI deposited subdivision plan 47008, which
would subdivide the Phase II land into five lots. These included Lots 3 and 4,
the two water lots that have been the subject of so much litigation in this
case. Most of the area of Lots 3 and 4 was covered by water when the
subdivision plan was deposited and at other relevant times. Immediately to the
north would be parkland and an area set aside for roads. Since the lands set
aside for parks and roads were lands set aside for the Crown, Lots 3 and 4
thereby adjoined Crown lands. The City of Victoria would take the position in
its reply to PNI’s claim that these specific details about the lots triggered a
special section, s. 108(2), of the Land Title Act when PNI deposited the
subdivision plan. Under s. 108(2), according to the City, title to the lots
would have reverted to the Crown upon the filing of the subdivision
plan.
7
In any case, the initial development by PNI did not take place on Lots 3
and 4. It began with landscaping of the parks and the other servicing work
that it had to do to fulfill its obligations. It constructed condominiums on
the south half of Lot 2 and began development on Lots 1 and 5, the other upland
lots. No buildings were put up on the water lots. Through the sale of Lots 1
and 5 and the developed half of Lot 2, the trial judge found, at para. 41, that
PNI recovered about $7 million compared to its costs for all the Phase II lands
of $5 million; in other words, with land remaining to sell, PNI already had a
40 percent profit.
8
PNI’s development of residential property amid landscaped parks and near
the newly constructed seawall resulted in the creation of a peaceful, tranquil
setting. Residents and visitors would frolic in the parks and might stroll along
the seawall to watch the sunset.
9
So, as the trial judge noted at para. 17, it was not surprising when
those enjoying this oasis of tranquility objected to the plans that PNI brought
forth for Lots 3 and 4. About five years after PNI purchased the land and
began development on the other lots, PNI’s architect had designed for the water
lots three-storey edifices that would sit atop concrete slabs. Such buildings
were allowed under the City’s 1987 zoning by-law. The concrete slabs would
rest on piles going down into the Harbour. With a combination of restaurants
and other commercial establishments planned in conjunction with additional
residential development, PNI aspired to the creation of a waterfront that would
be full of people, energy, and noise.
10
As the public became aware of these plans that would transform the
harbourfront as they now knew it, they began to express their discontent. They
voiced their concerns to their elected representatives on the City Council, and
all but one member of the Council voted on August 26, 1993 to rezone the water
lots so as to prevent additional residential development on them and so as to
limit buildings on these lots to one storey in height. In implementing new
limits, the Council asserted that it was trying to strike a balance appropriate
to the values and interests of the community in 1993 and that, in so doing, it
was not bound by the zoning adopted by a previous council.
11
Because this rezoning would significantly impact on PNI’s intentions for
these lots, PNI took the position that this “down-zoning” was in breach of the
City’s implied obligations under the Master Agreement and thus infringed PNI’s
rights as successor to BCEC under the Master Agreement. Accordingly, it sued
for breach of contract. Alternatively, it claimed restitution for unjust
enrichment for the parks and other amenities that it had constructed and from
which the City would benefit. With major issues at stake, the matter has
gradually made its way toward our Court.
III. Judicial
History
A. British
Columbia Supreme Court, [1996] B.C.J. No. 2523 (QL)
12
In the British Columbia Supreme Court trial before Mackenzie J., PNI
claimed against the City for damages for breach of contract or, alternatively,
restitution for unjust enrichment. After considering one preliminary issue,
the trial judge held that the City was liable to pay damages and, thus, did not
consider the alternative argument on restitution.
13
On a preliminary question at a voir dire, the City argued that s.
108(2) of the Land Title Act had operated to vest Lots 3 and 4 in the
Province when PNI deposited its subdivision plan at the land titles office.
This would mean that PNI did not even own the land that had given rise to its
claim against the City. The trial judge rejected this argument, holding that
s. 108(2) did not apply to areas within subdivided lots on the subdivision plan
but only to remainders within the titled land. Thus, it did not apply to Lots
3 and 4.
14
On the contractual issue, the trial judge was prepared to find for PNI.
Although there was no explicit term to this effect, he considered that there
was a necessary implication in the Master Agreement that the City’s zoning
would remain in place for a reasonable period of time. Such an implied term
did not bind future councils to particular zoning but simply dictated that a
future council would be liable for damages if it broke this contractual term.
In arriving at his conclusion that it was appropriate to find this implied
term, the trial judge took into consideration the policy reasons that “[t]o the
extent that certainty reduces business risk, it reduces the cost of development
. . .” (para. 39) and that “[t]he members of council . . . were in the best
position to assess public attitudes and the risk that those attitudes might
change during the course of a development intended to be built over a period of
time” (para. 40). The trial judge found that PNI had proceeded within a
reasonable time in the circumstances. He rejected any argument that the City
was exempt from paying damages when it breached a contract. Therefore, in his
written judgment, he held the City liable for breach of contract.
15
The trial judge did not reach any conclusion on the quantum of damages,
which he considered was still very much a live issue, nor on the alternative
claim of restitution for unjust enrichment.
B. British
Columbia Court of Appeal (1998), 58 B.C.L.R. (3d) 390
16
Esson J.A. wrote for a unanimous Court of Appeal. He set aside the
trial judgment and remitted the matter for trial on the remaining issue of
restitution for unjust enrichment.
17
In the judgment, Esson J.A. had to consider first the City’s attempt to
revive the s. 108(2) argument from the voir dire. Based on principles
of indefeasibility of title, he came close to saying that the City had no
standing to make the argument. In any event, the City lost on the merits of
the point. Esson J.A. considered that the obscure language of s. 108(2) was
directed toward the recovery of foreshore previously granted away and thus did
not apply to the case at bar. Indeed, he considered that any application of s.
108(2) here would lead to an absurd and unconscionable result. Thus, the Court
of Appeal’s judgment rejected the City’s argument on this point and even went
on to make a special costs award to show its disdain for the argument.
18
On the contractual issue, Esson J.A referred first to the foundational
principle that a municipal council cannot bind future councils. Previous
legislation in British Columbia had made special provisions for a municipality
to do just this in certain circumstances, but this legislation had been
repealed. In the absence of that kind of legislation, the proper approach to
municipal powers was to interpret them so that a present council could not bind
future citizens. Based on Vancouver v. Registrar Vancouver Land
Registration District, [1955] 2 D.L.R. 709 (B.C.C.A.), and Ingledew’s
Ltd. v. City of Vancouver (1967), 61 D.L.R. (2d) 41 (B.C.S.C.), Esson J.A.
held that even making the City liable for damages could effectively bind a
future municipal government. In the context of an agreement like the alleged
implied term, Esson J.A. concluded that the City lacked the power to fetter
future councils.
19
Moreover, Esson J.A. considered that s. 972(1) of the Municipal Act,
R.S.B.C. 1979, c. 290, created a statutory bar on claims against a municipality
related to changes in value from changed zoning. The legislature had created
one exception to this in s. 972(2). It could have created other exceptions,
but it did not. This further supported Esson J.A.’s view that the scheme of
the legislation was against a council being liable on implied terms like in the
case at bar. Esson J.A. considered that these kinds of policy questions were
appropriately questions for the legislature.
20
Esson J.A. concluded, then, that it was doubtful that contracting not to
down-zone would be intra vires. However, he preferred to rule based on
whether the allegedly implied term was actually implicit or not. On his
reading of the record, there had been acknowledgments in the negotiation
process that the City retained ultimate control over matters like zoning.
After examining the business efficacy rule, he stated that the term could not
be implied in fact because the City would not have agreed to it and could not
be implied in law because it contradicted the legislature’s pronounced policy.
Thus, the implication of the term had to be set aside.
21
In the circumstances, Esson J.A., writing for the unanimous Court of
Appeal, held that the alleged term could not be implied and would likely be ultra
vires. Thus, the City could not be liable in contract. However, because
the matter had not been dealt with below, the case would be remitted for trial
on the unjust enrichment issue.
IV. Relevant
Statutory Provisions
22
Land Title Act, R.S.B.C. 1979, c. 219 (now R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 250)
23. (1) Every indefeasible title, as long
as it remains in force and uncancelled, shall be conclusive evidence at law and
in equity, as against the Crown and all other persons, that the person named in
the title is indefeasibly entitled to an estate in fee simple to the land
described in the indefeasible title, subject to. . . .
108. . . .
(2) Where the subdivided area shown in and included
in a subdivision or reference plan deposited in the land title office before or
after this section comes into force adjoins land covered by water, and the land
is included in the subdivider’s indefeasible title and adjoins land the title
to which is vested in Her Majesty the Queen in right of the Province, the
deposit shall be deemed to be a transfer in fee simple of the first mentioned
land to Her Majesty the Queen in right of the Province, and the title of the
registered owner to the first mentioned land covered by water shall be deemed
to be extinguished.
215. (1) A covenant, whether of a negative or positive nature,
(a) in respect of
(i) the use of land; or
(ii) the use of a building on or to be erected
on land;
(b) that land is or is not to be built on;
(c) that land is not to be subdivided, or if
subdivision is permitted by the covenant, is not to be subdivided except in
accordance with the covenant;
or
(d) that several parcels of land designated
in the covenant and registered under one or more indefeasible titles are not to
be sold or transferred separately
in favour of the Crown or a Crown corporation or agency or of a
municipality or a regional district, in this section referred to as the
“covenantee”, may be registered as a charge against the title to that land and
is enforceable against the covenantor and his successors in title, even if the
covenant is not annexed to land owned by the covenantee.
. . .
(3) Where an instrument contains a covenant
registrable under this section, the covenant is binding on the covenantee and
his successors in title, notwithstanding that the instrument or other
disposition has not been signed by the covenantee.
Municipal Act, R.S.B.C. 1979, c. 290 (now R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 323)
963. (1) A local government may, by bylaw,
(a)
divide the whole or part of the municipality or regional district, as
the case may be, into zones, name each zone and show by map or describe by
legal description the boundaries of the zones,
(b)
limit the vertical extent of a zone and provide other zones above or
below it, and
(c)
regulate within the zones
(i) the use of land, buildings and structures,
(ii) the density of the use of land, buildings and structures, and
(iii) the siting, size and dimensions of
(A) buildings and structures, and
(B) uses that are permitted on the land, and
(d) regulate the shape, dimensions and area,
including the establishment of minimum and maximum sizes, of all parcels of
land that may be created by subdivision, and
(i)
the regulations may be different for different areas, and
(ii) the boundaries of those areas need not be
the same as the boundaries of zones created under subsection 1(a).
(2) The regulations under subsection (1) may be different for different
(a) zones,
(b) uses within a zone,
(c) standards of works and services provided, and
(d) siting circumstances
as specified in the bylaw.
(3) The power to regulate under subsection (1)
includes the power to prohibit any use or uses in any zone or zones.
972. (1) Compensation is not payable to any
person for any reduction in the value of that person’s interest in land, or for
any loss or damages that result from the adoption of an official community
plan, a rural land use bylaw or a bylaw under this Division or the issue of a
permit under Division (5).
980. . . .
(5) A local government may issue more than one
permit for an area of land, and the land shall be developed strictly in
accordance with the permit or permits issued, which shall also be binding on
the local government.
V. Issues
23
There are two basic issues in this case. First, on the appeal, the
question is whether the City was liable to pay damages under an implied
contractual term that the municipality would not rezone before the expiration
of a reasonable period of time. Second, on the cross-appeal, the question is
whether the City can successfully argue that s. 108(2) of the Land Title Act
means that PNI does not even have title to the land in question. I turn now to
analyzing these questions.
VI. Analysis
24
If we were to allow the City’s cross-appeal, PNI would no longer have
title to the land in question, and the appeal itself would thus become
meaningless. Thus, I propose to deal with the cross-appeal first. After
explaining why it must be dismissed, I will then turn to the appeal itself and
why it too must not be allowed.
A. Does Section 108(2) of the Land Title
Act Mean that PNI Does Not even Have Title to the Land in Question?
25
The cross-appeal presents a discrete, technical problem of statutory
interpretation. It has ultimately consisted of much argument on the small,
obscure, and even somewhat peculiar s. 108(2) of British Columbia’s Land
Title Act. This subsection provides in certain circumstances for a deemed
transfer of title to the Crown and extinguishment of fee simple. I can find no
good reason to interfere with the British Columbia Court of Appeal’s
interpretation of this subsection of their provincial statute. Indeed, on the
contrary, there is solid reason to reject the City’s interpretation and to affirm
the conclusion reached by both levels of courts in British Columbia.
26
In interpreting legislation, our Court and its members must be guided by
long-standing and well-accepted principles of statutory interpretation. One
such principle states that potentially confiscatory legislation ought to be
construed cautiously so as not to strip individuals of their rights without the
legislation being clear as to this intent. As described by P.-A. Côté, The
Interpretation of Legislation in Canada (3rd ed. 2000), at p. 482,
“encroachments on the enjoyment of property should be interpreted rigourously
and strictly. . . . The courts require that the legislature express himself
extremely clearly where there is an intention to expropriate or confiscate
without compensation.” (See also Leiriao v. Val-Bélair (Town), [1991] 3
S.C.R. 349, at p. 357; Hongkong Bank of Canada v. Wheeler Holdings Ltd.,
[1993] 1 S.C.R. 167, at p. 197.)
27
Given s. 108(2)’s clear confiscatory effect, the lower courts have
appropriately given it a strict interpretation and thus avoided what the Court
of Appeal termed “a result that could fairly be called absurd and
unconscionable” (para. 15). The trial judge held in the oral hearing on the
voir dire that a necessary implication of the subsection’s wording was that
the subsection did not apply to any subdivided area itself but simply to
adjoining land. The Court of Appeal upheld the trial judge’s “reasonable
interpretation [that] accords with the purpose of the enactment” (para. 15). I
too consider this to be the correct interpretation of the subsection. The
subsection uses two terms, “subdivided area” and “land”, that must be read to
refer to different things. The text, after all, refers to the “land” as adjoining
the “subdivided area”. The subsection results in a change of title only for
this “land” and thus not for the “subdivided area”. It is concerned not with
the lots created through subdivision but with other areas within the titled
land that amount to remainders.
28
On this interpretation of s. 108(2), it is clear that the subsection can
have no application to the facts before us. As the courts below correctly
determined, the water lots in question are part of the subdivided area on the
subdivision plan and are in no way remainders. They are thus not within the
scope of s. 108(2). Given this conclusion, I see no need to discuss the
argument that the City lacked standing to raise this argument. I do note in passing
my doubts on the proposition that the indefeasibility principle in s. 23(1),
designed as a curtain against past interests, can operate as a bar to standing
on the present operations of a statutory section such as s. 108(2) of the Land
Title Act. But the principles governing standing are set out elsewhere in
our jurisprudence, and I need not make any decisions on these issues here given
that the cross-appeal ultimately fails on its merits.
29
Thus, there was no error in the courts below on the merits of this
issue. Accordingly, I would dismiss the cross-appeal.
B. Was the City Liable to Pay Damages
Under an Implied Contractual Term that the Municipality Would Not Rezone Before
the Expiration of a Reasonable Period of Time?
1. Introduction
The Alleged Implied Term
30
In the end, the appellant rests its case on the argument that the City
of Victoria is bound by an implied term to keep the zoning in place for a
number of years and to pay damages if it modifies it. The onus was on the
appellant to demonstrate that such a term would be legal and in conformity with
the legislation governing municipalities and with the public policy
considerations underpinning the legislative rules. It would also have to
demonstrate that such an implied term has indeed been agreed to by the parties
and should thus be read into their contract. (M.J.B. Enterprises Ltd. v.
Defence Construction (1951) Ltd., [1999] 1 S.C.R. 619, at para. 27, per
Iacobucci J. citing Canadian Pacific Hotels Ltd. v. Bank of Montreal,
[1987] 1 S.C.R. 711, at p. 775, per Le Dain J.) Reading in of such a
term is an act of judicial authority particularly important in the context of a
contractual relationship with municipalities, owing to the special nature of
their powers and their societal functions.
31
In the absence of evidence and given the onus on the party alleging the
implied term, reading such a term into the contract between the parties in the
case at bar would be a purely discretionary exercise of judicial power. It would
lack any evidentiary foundation. Indeed, the City never conceded the existence
of such a term either in its factum or at the hearing in our Court. Its
counsel consistently maintained that such a term would infringe the law and
negate important public policy considerations.
32
This alleged term would have far reaching implications. As explained by
the appellant, it would amount to a clear commitment by the City to bind itself
not to exercise in the future for an indefinite period some of its most important
regulatory powers about zoning and construction. To give effect to the alleged
term, the appellant needs to demonstrate that such a power exists and that this
term is not illegal or contrary to fundamental principles of public policy.
In addition to proving the existence of such a term, the party alleging it has
to demonstrate that it is neither ultra vires nor illegal.
2. The Nature of Municipal Governments
33
Municipal governments are democratic institutions through which the
people of a community embark upon and structure a life together. Even in this
context, however, nobody can challenge the proposition that municipal
governments are creatures of the legislature – a municipal government has only
those powers granted to it by provincial legislation:
[translation] A
municipality is a creature of statute and has only those powers that have been
expressly delegated to it or that are directly derived from the powers so
delegated. . . .
(J. Hétu, Y. Duplessis and D. Pakenham, Droit municipal: Principes
généraux et contentieux (1998), at p. 13; Immeubles Port Louis Ltée v.
Lafontaine (Village), [1991] 1 S.C.R. 326, at p. 346)
There is no
doubt about this principle, and our Court has unanimously reaffirmed it in its
decision in Public School Boards’ Assn. of Alberta v. Alberta (Attorney
General), [2000] 2 S.C.R. 409, 2000 SCC 45, at para. 33. (See generally
Hétu, Duplessis and Pakenham, supra, at pp. 8-13.)
34
Given that provincial legislation will determine the limits on the
City’s powers, it is to provincial legislation that we must turn to answer the
fundamental question of whether the City had the capacity to make and be bound
by the contractual term that PNI alleges. Only if it did have this capacity
under the relevant provincial legislation could there be any issue as to
whether the set of interlocking agreements here gave rise to such a contractual
obligation. Thus, the question becomes the content of the pertinent provincial
legislation in force at the relevant time.
35
In embarking on my analysis of British Columbia’s municipal government
legislation, I am mindful of the recent words of Major J. in Nanaimo (City)
v. Rascal Trucking Ltd., [2000] 1 S.C.R. 342, 2000 SCC 13: “There is ample
authority, on the interpretation of statutes generally and of municipal
statutes specifically, to support a broad and purposive approach” (para. 18).
Major J. also cited this comment from Iacobucci J.’s reasons in R. v.
Greenbaum, [1993] 1 S.C.R. 674, at p. 688: “a court should look to the
purpose and wording of the provincial enabling legislation when deciding
whether or not a municipality has been empowered to pass a certain by‑law”.
(Nanaimo, at para. 19). These words do not mean that municipal
jurisdiction is to be read in an unlimited way. Indeed the judgment of this
Court in Greenbaum, supra, suggests that the purposive aspects of
the interpretation apply only to the scope of expressly conferred powers.
Municipalities have only those powers expressly conferred on them,
powers necessarily following from these, or powers essential to
municipal purposes (R. v. Sharma, [1993] 1 S.C.R. 650, at p. 668,
affirmed in Nanaimo, supra, at para. 17).
36
In interpreting municipal powers, then, we should look at the text and
context of the legislation. A careful examination of the text of the
legislation, its legislative history, judicial interpretation and underlying
objects and policy rationales demonstrates that the City did not have the
capacity to make and be bound by a contractual term such as the one alleged to
exist in this case. If there was any such term implicit in the agreements in
the case before us, it was ultra vires and contrary to well-established
public policy.
3. Legislative Text
37
In seeking to demonstrate that the City had the capacity to agree to the
kind of term PNI alleges, it is incumbent on PNI to find some textual basis for
this capacity. The general zoning capacity is found in ss. 963 and 972 of the Municipal
Act. PNI attempts to find something binding on the City in s. 980(5) of
the Municipal Act and s. 215 of the Land Title Act, as well as in
arguments about an implied power that would give rise to this capacity.
38
Section 963 of the Municipal Act provides for the power to zone
by by-law. Inherent in this is that a municipality may change its zoning in
the same way. Moreover, s. 972(1) of the same statute states that no
compensation is payable to any person for reduced land values due to changes in
zoning. There is a very specific exception from this latter rule in s.
972(2). Whether or not s. 972 would serve as a specific bar to a claim such as
the one in the case at bar, it and s. 963 together clearly show the scheme of
the statute. Zoning is a legislative power. On its face, the statute provides
for no power to constrain the future use of this legislative power. The
legislature has generally considered that municipalities should not pay
compensation for how they use this legislative power. These principles all
militate against PNI’s case from the outset.
39
PNI argues, of course, that it can find the capacity it seeks through s.
215 of the Land Title Act or through s. 980(5) of the Municipal Act.
In particular, first, it cites s. 215(3) of the Land Title Act, which
reads “[w]here an instrument contains a covenant registrable
under this section, the covenant is binding on the covenantee and his
successors in title, notwithstanding that the instrument or other disposition
has not been signed by the covenantee” (emphasis added). Based on the
registered BCEC covenant, then, PNI seemingly tries to argue that the City was
bound to keep zoning that would allow BCEC or its successor PNI to fulfill its
plans. But this is an argument that leads ultimately to an absurd result. In
making it, PNI asserts that because its predecessor has made a covenant in
favour of the City in order to allow itself to be subject to the City’s
legislative powers, the City is bound by the covenant. In other words, the
person to whom a promise was made is bound by it. One wonders if there
might not be an error in this section, especially when s. 215(1) in fine
by contrast, describes how the covenant is “enforceable against the
covenantor”. And, indeed, British Columbia later corrected the words of the s.
215(3) on which PNI relies, by amending them in 1989 to read “binding on the
covenantor”: Land Title Amendment Act, 1989, S.B.C. 1989, c. 69, s. 22.
40
Although there are statutes whose strict reading might make this more
complicated, typographical errors in legislation should not ordinarily compel
us to read statutes absurdly. As Côté, supra, notes at p. 390,
Material errors may slip into a legislative text
during the process of drafting or publication. The result may be absurd either
in itself, in relation to other provisions of the enactment, or with respect to
the aim of the legislation. The law should be interpreted in the light of its
aims, passing over obviously defective written expression.
Section 215(3)
was clearly intended to provide that a covenant was still binding on the covenantor
even when the covenantee had not signed it. The correction of this subsection
confirms this understanding. I would read it sensibly in accordance with this
true intent. As a result, it is of no use to PNI’s case.
41
PNI has also tried to argue on the basis of s. 980(5) of the Municipal
Act. As it existed in 1987, this section provided that a development
permit was binding on the municipality once issued and might even prevent
rezoning. Unfortunately for PNI, it did not have a development permit for Lots
3 and 4. It had obtained a development permit for its earlier work and was
preparing to apply for a development permit for Lots 3 and 4 when the municipal
council enacted the democratic wishes of the citizenry by changing the zoning
on those lots. PNI argues that the City is bound to its earlier zoning
irrespective of the rules in the statute, which provide for development permits
that bind the municipality and allow the developer to undertake construction
within two years (s. 702AA(5), introduced by S.B.C. 1977, c. 57, s. 13(2),
consolidated as Municipal Act, R.S.B.C. 1979, c. 290, s. 717, repealed
and integrated into ss. 976 and 980(6) of the Municipal Act by S.B.C.
1985, c. 79, ss. 4 and 8). But the very fact that the legislature has this
system means that it wanted this system and not a slightly altered version
thereof. PNI cannot ask us to change the rules on the development permit
system so that its project fits within it. So, this argument also is without
application in the case at bar.
42
There was some discussion in the course of the oral argument
of whether there could be an implied power for the City to enter into an
implied term as argued. This implication of an implication begins to tax the
imagination. But the question goes to the heart of how we are going to read
the legislation. I am satisfied that the text gives no support to any argument
that the City could be fettered from changing its zoning. Given that this
Court is not in the business of pulling rabbits out of hats, whether we should
find an implied power can best be answered by turning to the context of the
legislation. I begin with the appreciation of the doctrine of ultra vires.
43
In addition, the appellant relies on an implied power to be found more
particularly in s. 19 of the Municipal Act which grants municipal
corporations the power to enter into contracts for materials and services. The
appellant also invokes s. 287 which vests incidental powers in
municipalities. The appellant thus tries to assert an implied power in order
to validate an implied term of the contract.
44
Municipal powers must receive a broad, purposive but, also, reasonable
interpretation as the Court stated in Nanaimo, supra, at para.
20, per Major J. Reading in an implied power in relation to the
exercise of the delegated legislative powers of the municipalities involves
other policy considerations than business contracts entered into the normal
exercise of the powers of the municipality, in its day-to-day life. The
history of the legislative scheme in this respect may also be relied upon to
assess the soundness in law of this attempt to read in an implied power to
enter into the alleged implied term.
4. The Doctrine of Ultra Vires
The Legislative History: The Absence of an Express Power
45
As Rand J. once stated, “That we may look at the history of legislation
to ascertain its present meaning is undoubted” (City of Vancouver v. B.C.
Telephone Co., [1951] S.C.R. 3, at p. 8). Looking at the legislation in
place preceding and following the events at issue in this appeal provides at
least a context for comparison and might even shed light on the meaning of the
statutory framework as it existed at the relevant time. I propose, then, to
survey briefly the land use contracts system of the 1970s as well as the later
1993 law that permits the trading of zoning for amenities.
46
From 1971 to 1978, British Columbia had a land use contracts system.
This appears to have been the only Canadian experience with a full-fledged
system of this kind: see I. M. Rogers, Canadian Law of Planning and Zoning
(loose-leaf), at para. 5.116. This system was essentially a means of enabling
municipalities to commit to particular zoning by contract. As described in one
case, “[t]he land use contract process foresaw the possibility that subsequent
municipal councils might take a different view of matters than their
predecessors. The land use contract was intended to provide certainty for both
developers and municipalities” (Martin Corp. v. West Vancouver (District)
(1993), 85 B.C.L.R. (2d) 305 (S.C.), at para. 27). As a result, a land use
contract could not be displaced or altered by a subsequent by-law (ibid.).
Section 702A of the Municipal Act at that time, based on certain
conceptions of appropriate policy with respect to municipal governments, thus
provided for zoning by contract.
47
However, British Columbia’s legislature chose to repeal this system: Municipal
Amendment Act, 1977, S.B.C. 1977, c. 57, s. 13(1) (proclaimed into force
for November 15, 1978 by B.C. Reg. 259/78). It replaced the system with the
more limited development permit scheme described earlier in these reasons: s.
13(2). This system, in force at the time relevant to the case, also allowed
municipalities to request certain specific works on roads prior to a
subdivision or building permit (Municipal Act, R.S.B.C. 1979, c. 290, s.
989(4)), but it did not allow general bargaining for amenities. The deliberate
legislative choice to repeal the land use contracts system underlines the fact
that the British Columbia legislature had abolished contractual zoning and any
notion of zoning being restricted by contract prior to the events in the case
at bar.
48
After the repeal of the land development systems, s. 982(2) of the Municipal
Act read:
982. . . .
(2) Subject to subsections (3) and (5), a land use
contract that is entered into and registered in a land title office may be
amended
(a) by bylaw . . ., or
(b) by a development variance permit under
section 974 or a development permit under section 976.
Such a
provision is purely a grandfathering clause. It protected existing contracts
already validly entered into by municipalities. It did not purport to grant an
authority to make such agreements with developers in the future when the very
purpose and effect of the repeal was to deny them such powers.
49
Since 1993, British Columbia has permitted municipalities to request
amenities in exchange for zoning. With the Municipal Affairs, Recreation
and Housing Statutes Amendment Act, 1993, S.B.C. 1993, c. 58, s. 4, the
zoning power of s. 963 of the Municipal Act is replaced so as to include
the possibility of the municipal council imposing conditions under which an
owner is entitled to a higher-density zoning (see s. 963.1(2) of the amended
legislation). The basic position in Canadian law is that municipalities cannot
zone in exchange for amenities without some specific statutory authority for
such arrangements: Re Walmar Investments Ltd. and City of North Bay,
[1970] 1 O.R. 109 (C.A.), additional reasons at [1970] 3 O.R. 492 (C.A.). The
post-1993 scheme provides such specific statutory authority. As a point of
comparison, it thus highlights the fact that the pre-1993 scheme simply did not
provide the requisite specific statutory authority.
50
The legislative scheme that existed at the time PNI undertook its
transactions did not include a land use contracts system, it did not include
contractual zoning, and it did not authorize the trading of amenities for
zoning. Comparing it to prior and subsequent systems makes all the more clear
that under the legislation as it existed at the relevant point in time, implied
terms such as the one alleged by PNI were without any statutory authorization.
Implied Powers
51
The history of the legislative scheme may be relevant to the case at bar
in another way, as well. This gives further reason against trying to find an
implied power to make long-term commitments with respect to zoning equivalent
to the powers it might have with respect to certain long-term business
arrangements. Indeed, a municipality as a corporation arguably does have an
implied power to bind successor councils by a contract in the exercise of
ordinary proprietary or business powers: I. M. Rogers, The Law of Canadian
Municipal Corporations (2nd ed. (loose-leaf)), vol. 2, at para. 199.4; Lawrason
v. Town of Dundas (1920), 18 O.W.N. 22. But the form of British Columbia’s
municipal government legislation militates against extending this to the
present situation.
52
Prior to 1998, the types and modalities of long-term commitments into
which municipalities might enter were enumerated quite precisely. Indeed, the Municipal
Act then in force implemented time limits on contracts for the supply of
materials, equipment, and services. The statute went so far as to require
approval by municipal voters of contracts with a duration of over five years (Municipal
Act, R.S.B.C. 1979, c. 290, ss. 290 and 321). In 1993, s. 23 of the Local
Elections Reform Act, 1993, S.B.C. 1993, c. 54, altered the form,
but not the substance of s. 321 of the Municipal Act. The statute also
tightly regulated matters like short-term borrowing (s. 344(1)) and the leasing
of property (s. 322). Although municipalities could enter into long-term
commitments related to their business and proprietary powers, these commitments
were subject to the statute’s close controls.
53
A municipal government statute could simply allow municipalities to
engage in contracts of whatever form served their proprietary and business
purposes. It would seem that British Columbia’s legislature later chose to
implement such statutory terms. In 1998, the Province passed the Local
Government Statutes Amendment Act, 1998, S.B.C. 1998, c. 34, whose preamble
explained the new statute’s philosophy as oriented toward “recogniz[ing] local
government as an independent, responsible and accountable order of government.
. .”. The amendments in this statute removed all of the specific controls on
municipalities’ long-term commitments and instead provided for a more general
corporate power (see s. 176 of the new Municipal Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c.
323). Such a legislative scheme is clearly possible, since one now seems to
exist, but this merely accentuates the point that prior to 1998, at the time
relevant to the case at bar, British Columbia did not have such a régime. It
had set up a system of tight controls on long-term business and proprietary
commitments. This scheme did not even refer to long-term commitments affecting
the legislative power, as these powers were not envisioned.
54
Moreover, there is another important answer to the argument
that municipalities have an implied power to enter into terms such as the one
alleged. It is that an implied power to allow contracts to trump the
municipality’s future legislative discretion over zoning raises additional
policy concerns. We will see these clearly after a survey of some of the
relevant case law in the area.
5. Pertinent Case Law
55
As the authorities make clear, a limitation on a
municipality’s legislative power is a very serious matter. As Rogers, The
Law of Canadian Municipal Corporations, supra, puts it at para.
199.4, “Unless expressly authorized to do so local authorities have no power to
enter into an agreement the effect of which will be to restrict or divest the
legislative powers of succeeding councils in respect of any matter affecting
the public at large.” Rogers goes on to note that this does not mean that a
council acting in its proprietary or business capacity cannot make contracts.
But it does mean that a council cannot somehow give up its legislative powers:
cf. Birkdale District Electric Supply Co. v. Corporation of Southport,
[1926] A.C. 355 (H.L.), at pp. 364 and 371-72.
56
Eloquent echoes of this principle have rung out through Canadian case
law:
Our municipal councils are just as truly legislative
bodies within the ambit of their jurisdiction as Parliament or the Legislature;
and any contract which would interfere with the due exercise of the discretion
and judgment of a member of such a council must equally be void as against
public policy.
(Town of Eastview v. Roman Catholic Episcopal Corporation of Ottawa (1918),
44 O.L.R. 284 (S.C., App. Div.), at pp. 297-98)
[M]unicipalities must be free to amend or alter their by-laws as
circumstances dictate. They cannot bind themselves or their successors by
contract with a third party to the status quo.
(Capital Regional District v. District of Saanich (1980), 115
D.L.R. (3d) 596 (B.C.S.C.), at p. 605)
[A] municipality cannot bargain away its legislative powers in advance.
(Re Galt-Canadian Woodworking Machinery Ltd. and City of Cambridge
(1982), 135 D.L.R. (3d) 58 (Ont. Div. Ct.), at p. 63, aff’d (1983), 146 D.L.R.
(3d) 768 (Ont. C.A.))
Municipal
legislative powers are an integral part of governance that municipalities
cannot give up. Municipal councils cannot fetter the discretion of successor
councils to engage in the legislative process without undue influences.
57
An implication of this is that in the absence of provincial legislation
implementing a different public policy, municipalities cannot sell zoning: D.
P. Jones and A. S. de Villars, Principles of Administrative Law (3rd ed.
1999), at p. 181; Vancouver v. Registrar Vancouver Land Registration
District, supra; Ingledew’s Ltd. v. City of Vancouver, supra.
They cannot agree to change zoning in return for particular consideration, and
they cannot agree to keep zoning unchanged in return for particular
consideration.
58
In this respect, it should be noted that the judgment of the British
Columbia Supreme Court in Kendrick v. Nelson (City) (1997), 31 B.C.L.R.
(3d) 134, does not stand as an authority to support the assertion that s. 19 of
the Municipal Act provides the statutory basis for a municipality to
enter into long-term agreements with a developer about the exercise of its
zoning powers. In that case, the petitioners had claimed that an agreement
made with the developer violated s. 292 of the Act in respect of the nominal
transfer of land and contracts for construction and city services. No claim
had been made in respect of the zoning commitments and thus the Supreme Court
did not have to address that issue. The ratio of the judgment was that
the agreement did not commit the city to assist the developer within the
meaning of s. 292. Moreover, the agreement in dispute was completed in 1995.
Since 1993, the province of British Columbia has permitted municipalities to
request amenities in exchange for zoning. Thus, even if the matter had been in
dispute, the City of Nelson would not have had to rely on s. 19 to enter into a
contract concerning the exchange of zoning for amenities.
6. Illegality and Public Policy
The Rules Against Fettering
59
PNI, of course, tries to distinguish its claim from a simple claim that
the City has contracted to provide particular zoning. PNI tries to argue that
the implied term is that the City will either keep in place particular zoning or
else pay compensation or damages. Some cases do seem to have distinguished
indirect fettering (such as in an agreement to compensate) from direct
fettering: see Attorney-General for New Brunswick v. Saint John, [1948]
3 D.L.R. 693 (N.B.S.C., App. Div.), at p. 707; Vancouver v. Registrar
Vancouver Land Registration District, supra, at p. 715; and Re
Galt-Canadian (Ont. Div. Ct.), supra, at p. 64. But such a
distinction cannot be accepted, as it is likely without any legal basis and,
moreover, unhelpful in rationalizing the case law.
60
First, the distinction is likely without any legal basis because it is
unclear whether it even reflects a principle from the cases cited to support
it. Different portions of the latter two cases contain language leading to
quite the opposite conclusion: Vancouver v. Registrar Vancouver Land
Registration District, supra, at p. 713; Re Galt-Canadian (Ont.
Div. Ct.), supra, at p. 63. In the case of Saint John, supra,
where the ratio decidendi is not completely clear, the court did allow
a city to commit to a six-year contract for a particular company to provide
busing services and to receive compensation if the city cancelled this contract
early. But the court made its decision only after it provided a reading of the
contract whereby it would not be illegal, and whereby the contract did not
commit the municipality to any particular by-laws: pp. 705-6. The contract at
issue there could be characterized as a business agreement. In addition, it
was a relevant consideration that the city was a common-law corporation, rather
than a statutory municipal corporation, and thus not subject to the same
doctrines of ultra vires as relevant in a case like the case at bar: p.
708. Moreover, although nothing further seems to have ever come of this, special
leave to appeal the result of the case to the Supreme Court of Canada was
granted: Attorney-General for New Brunswick v. Saint John, [1948] 3
D.L.R. 851. Thus, with two of the cases cited for it also supporting the
opposite conclusion and the last not clearly supporting the distinction at all,
the supposed distinction has a dubious legal foundation.
61
The judgment of our Court in Wells v. Newfoundland, [1999] 3
S.C.R. 199, has also been cited in support of the claim of an implied municipal
power to contract regarding long-term development and involving the exercise
of zoning powers. The Wells case did not deal with a contract
governing the exercise of municipal legislative powers. The agreement in
dispute remained a business contract in relation to the hiring of senior civil
servants.
62
Second, the supposed distinction between direct and indirect fettering
is also unhelpful because it is inconsistent with other case law and, more
importantly, with the principles that undergird this area of the law. Other
cases (and, as cited above, even different portions of the same cases) have
used language that would make even an indirect fettering illegal: see e.g. Walker
v. Mayor of St. John (1872), 14 N.B.R. 143 (S.C.), at pp. 147-48; and Town
of Eastview, supra, at pp. 297-98. This broader language springs
from the rationales for a prohibition on fettered discretion, which include
protecting the municipal legislative process from undue influence and from
embarrassment. Direct or indirect fettering would have the same effect on the
exercise of municipal powers.
63
The authorities generally support the view that this broader language is
appropriate and that it should apply over the direct/indirect distinction that
some have tried to draw. In Vancouver v. Registrar Vancouver Land
Registration District, supra (a case cited as supporting the use of
the distinction at p. 715), the British Columbia Court of Appeal discussed how
some councillors who might consider a by-law unwise might nonetheless vote for
it so as not “to expose the City to a claim for damages by defeating it” (p.
713), thereby recognizing at least from a factual standpoint the problems
inherent in allowing fettering through a requirement to compensate. In Re
Galt-Canadian, supra, the Ontario Court of Appeal analyzed a
situation where a municipal council might incur a contractual liability if it
failed to take a certain course of legislative action. The Court of Appeal
concluded at p. 768 that this was an unacceptable situation. In the eloquent
words of the lower court in that same case, “Legislative powers are entrusted
to municipalities for the public good, and they must always be in a position to
exercise them as the public good requires” (Re Galt-Canadian (Ont. Div.
Ct.), supra, at p. 63). Given this principle, an agreement to
compensate for a legislative decision like the one in the present case is no
more acceptable than an outright restriction on the legislative power.
64
All of PNI’s attempts to transform its case into a claim for
compensation cannot hide the fact that it is demanding compensation precisely
because the City exercised its legislative powers in a particular way. A
municipality’s choice to use its legislative powers to rezone land so that the municipality’s
zoning continues to reflect its best wisdom is a legitimate choice and a choice
that is very much part of its legislative power: see Wall and Redekop Corp.
v. City of Vancouver (1974), 16 N.R. 436 (B.C.C.A.), aff’d (1976), 16 N.R.
435 (S.C.C.). Indeed, it must be remembered that the new zoning by-law was
never attacked as illegal. A duty to compensate for a particular legislative
choice along these lines would necessarily make that legislative choice subject
to considerations other than an objective examination of what is best for the
community of which the developer is undoubtedly also a part.
65
Contracts related to a municipality’s business and proprietary functions
might well affect the resources available to it and thereby hinder its legislative
discretion (or bring hindrances of another kind, as in Dowty Boulton Paul
Ltd. v. Wolverhampton Corp., [1971] 2 All E.R. 277 (Ch. D.)). But they
simply do not inject the same kind of outside consideration into the
legislative process. The distinction between direct and indirect fettering,
as PNI conceives it, is simply not a useful distinction. The distinction
between legislative powers, adjudicative powers, and business or proprietary
powers, accepted elsewhere in our Court’s jurisprudence (e.g., Shell Canada
Products Ltd. v. Vancouver (City), [1994] 1 S.C.R. 231, at p. 273; Nanaimo,
supra, at paras. 28 and 31), is the sole distinction that should apply (William
Cory & Son Ltd. v. London Corp., [1951] 2 K.B. 476 (C.A.), at p. 486).
Unless there is legislation expressing a public policy permitting it to do so,
a municipality may engage in business and proprietary contracts, but it cannot
agree to terms that fetter its legislative power.
66
As a result, I would conclude that the alleged implied term would have
been an illegal fetter on the municipality’s discretionary legislative powers.
Established case law and its underlying principles support my rejection of
PNI’s argument, powerfully reinforcing the conclusion that already flowed from
the statute itself. The very illegality of such a term and its inconsistency
with public policy strengthen the case against reading it into a contract
entered into within a clear statutory framework. It should be added in this
appeal that counsel for the City never evidenced that there was such an implied
term. He rather affirmed that the contracts with PNI were legal if given the
legal interpretation ascribed to them by the City of Victoria. I turn in the
final part of my reasons to a brief reference to how this result is rational
from a public policy perspective.
Public Policy Considerations
67
I wish to add a brief word as to public policy considerations since a
good deal of debate in this case has been related to policy issues. To some,
it will seem like a harsh result to say that PNI cannot sue the City for
departing from some alleged understanding and withdrawing its consideration
after the construction of costly improvements by PNI. Indeed, some would
properly argue that there are policy reasons for allowing municipalities to
derive the benefits of a fuller capacity to contract that would enable them to
engage developers on a long-term basis with more certainty. This capacity
would presumably help reduce the risk premiums that developers might otherwise
require. But these considerations are not conclusive and should in no way
alter the result.
68
First, the result is not as harsh as it might initially seem because
those in the business know that dealing with a municipal government is
different from dealing with a purely private corporation. For example, no
indoor management rule protects someone dealing with a municipality from having
to ensure that proper procedures were followed with respect to the contract,
which is quite different from the situation with a private corporation: Rogers,
The Law of Canadian Municipal Corporations, supra, at para.
199.1. The record shows that as an experienced developer, PNI was aware of the
special legal and political risks attendant on dealing with a municipality.
Developers choose to undertake those risks.
69
Moreover, municipalities will be bound by their business contracts.
They will not be free to break them on a whim. They will have to pay
compensation to the other party barring an express statutory provision denying
any form of compensation or damages. On the other hand, contracts concerning
the exercise of legislative powers involve other legal rules and policy
considerations, as appears from the discussion above of the rules against
direct and indirect fettering of municipal authority.
70
Second, municipalities do not become free to break non-contractual
understandings based on mere whim. First, there remain legal protections
against a municipality that acts in bad faith. In addition, as R. W. Macaulay
and R. G. Doumani put it in Ontario Land Development: Legislation and
Practice (loose-leaf), vol. 1, at p. 4-119, para. 18.8, a major component
of development and redevelopment projects is “a great deal of faith and
trust between the public and private sectors of the region” (emphasis
added). Municipalities that deal with developers in a manner that does not
reflect principles of faith and trust when they are not contractually bound may
well face non-contractual consequences such as developers being less willing to
deal with the municipality without significantly higher risk premiums.
71
Third, a very important policy consideration militates against
municipalities being bound in ways that constrain their legislative powers.
This is the policy consideration that runs through the jurisprudence in this
area. Municipal governments are governments exercising powers delegated by the
provincial legislatures, and they must be able to govern based on the best
interests of their residents and based on conceptions of the public good. To
help protect this important value, our Court has adopted such principles as the
one that ambiguities in municipal government statutes are to be interpreted so
as to favour the citizens and their ability to undertake a path of shared
self-governance (Shell, supra, at p. 277). Although there
can be arguments for each kind of public policy as to whether municipalities
should be able to bind themselves on zoning matters, there is certainly nothing
irrational about preventing municipalities from restraining themselves in
striving for the public good in the future. There is no doubt in my mind that
British Columbia’s legislators, carefully balancing many competing interests
and considerations, had chosen this latter public policy at the pertinent time.
72
As outlined earlier in these reasons, there was no statutory basis at
the time on which a municipality could contract with respect to zoning. The
structure and scheme of the pertinent legislation revealed that the legislature
did not intend for a municipality to compensate landowners for the financial
impact of changes in zoning. At other points in history, British Columbia had
permitted contracts related to zoning, but it had explicitly repealed this
legislation prior to the relevant time and did not introduce anything similar
until some time after.
73
Therefore, in my view, the legislature made its intentions very clear
and deliberately and firmly established a public policy to which an implied
term as argued would run totally counter. That there are arguments for other
policy approaches does not mean that judges should begin rewriting
legislation. Leaving aside our important role as guardians of the
Constitution, our calling is generally the interpretation and implementation of
the wishes of the democratically elected legislature where it has made its
intentions clear, and it is the rational advancement of our traditional systems
of common and civil law where the legislature has not otherwise spoken.
74
Under established law, the appeal must be dismissed. The wording of the
legislation, its history, consistent case law, and established public policy
all support the conclusion that the municipality had no capacity to agree to an
implied term such as PNI has argued. Whether such an implied term might or
might not have made sense for business efficiency reasons, any such term was ultra
vires and contrary to legislatively established public policy.
VII. Conclusion
75
In the end, I would dismiss both the appeal and the cross-appeal with
costs. In the result, the conclusion of the Court of Appeal is affirmed, and
the matter is remitted to trial on any unjust enrichment argument that may
exist.
The reasons of Major, Bastarache and Binnie JJ. were delivered by
76
Bastarache J.
(dissenting on the appeal) — It is well accepted that where a municipality
enters a contract with a legitimate purpose, that contract must be honoured.
The basis of this principle is the simple maxim relied on by Pacific National
Investments Ltd. (“PNI”) in this appeal: a deal is a deal. I am not persuaded
that the City of Victoria (“City”) should be able to terminate with impunity a
contract that it uniquely crafted, thoughtfully entered, received the full
benefit of, and concedes is lawful. PNI spent over $2.5 million on
infrastructure upgrades, which included building a new seawall, new roads and
creating new parks for the City in anticipation of the commercial development
that would result from the land transfer and zoning provided for in the
contract. The public interest would not be served by allowing the City to
escape its commitments. Nor do I consider that awarding
compensation for breach of contract will amount to a fettering of the municipal
power over zoning that adversely affects the public’s interest in local
government.
77
In an effort to escape liability, the City has argued that the contract
is ultra vires, taking a position that runs counter to the modern trend
that municipal powers should be interpreted broadly and benevolently to enhance
the public interest. Further, this deal, which was specifically designed for
the City’s needs and refined over a three-year period, is not, as contended by
the City, void for public policy. Current B.C. legislation allowing municipal
corporations to bind themselves to long term development contracts evidences
the strong policy reasons for granting such power.
78
I agree with my colleague LeBel J.’s analysis of the cross-appeal, but cannot
accept his conclusion on the main appeal that PNI is not entitled to damages
for breach of contract. I will therefore address the following issues:
1. Was there an implied term in the
contract that the City would compensate if it did not maintain the zoning for a
reasonable time?
2. Is the implied term ultra vires?
3. Is it contrary to public policy to
enforce the implied term?
Analysis
Issue #1:
Was There an Implied Term in the Contract that the City Would Compensate if It
Did Not Maintain the Zoning for a Reasonable Time?
79
PNI argues that the Songhees Master Agreement (“SMA”)
contained an implied term that the zoning contemplated in that contract would
not be changed for a reasonable time. It does not argue that the contract
prohibited the City from ever changing the zoning or that in enacting the
by-law which changed the zoning, the council acted in bad faith. PNI’s
position is simple: it argues only that in entering a contract that was
conditional on rezoning, the City agreed to adopt and maintain the zoning
bargained for and that in view of the breach of that term, it is entitled to
damages for breach of contract. Thus, I would characterize the implied term
sought to be recognized in a different manner than my colleague (para. 32 of
his reasons). The implied term does not bind the City from rezoning for any
length of time: it simply recognizes that in consideration of PNI’s initial
investment, a change in zoning must be offset by compensation.
80
This Court recently reiterated the relevant test for an implied term in M.J.B.
Enterprises Ltd. v. Defence Construction (1951) Ltd., [1999] 1 S.C.R. 619.
In M.J.B., after the respondent accepted a non-compliant tender, the
lowest compliant tenderer successfully argued that there was an implied term in
the call for tenders to accept the lowest compliant bid. At para. 29,
Iacobucci J. stated:
. . . a contractual term may be implied on the basis of
presumed intentions of the parties where necessary to give business efficacy
to the contract or where it meets the “officious bystander” test. It is
unclear whether these are to be understood as two separate tests but I need not
determine that here. What is important in both formulations is a focus on the
intentions of the actual parties. A court, when dealing with terms implied in
fact, must be careful not to slide into determining the intentions of
reasonable parties. This is why the implication of the term must have a certain
degree of obviousness to it, and why, if there is evidence of a contrary
intention, on the part of either party, an implied term may not be found on
this basis. As G. H. L. Fridman states in The Law of Contract in
Canada (3rd ed. 1994), at p. 476:
In determining the intention of the parties,
attention must be paid to the express terms of the contract in order to see
whether the suggested implication is necessary and fits in with what has
clearly been agreed upon, and the precise nature of what, if anything, should
be implied. [Emphasis added; underlining in original deleted.]
To establish
the existence of the implied term, PNI must demonstrate that
the term was one which the parties would say, if questioned, that they had
obviously assumed. It must also show that the term was necessary to give
business efficacy to the SMA. In my view, both requirements are satisfied.
81
The courts below differed on the question of whether there was an
implied term not to down-zone. I find persuasive the trial judge’s reasoning
that it was necessary to imply the term to give the agreement business
efficacy:
I think that it is necessarily implied into the
master agreement that zoning would remain undisturbed for a reasonable period
of time for development. . . . PNI was paying for a development
opportunity dependent on zoning and it needed continuation of that zoning for a
reasonable time to realize on its investment.
([1996] B.C.J. No. 2523 (QL), at para. 35)
On the other
hand, the Court of Appeal stated that the reasons relied on by the trial judge
“are all . . . reasons for concluding that it would have been reasonable and
logical, from the point of view of PNI, to include such a term” ((1998), 58
B.C.L.R. (3d) 390, at para. 47). With respect, I do not see any error in the
trial judge’s conclusion: PNI assumed the term was included, as would the
officious bystander, because without it the contract could not be given
business efficacy. The Court of Appeal’s position is rather narrow (at para.
45):
[I]t seems a reasonable inference that no one raised the subject of the
City agreeing not to down‑zone because it was taken for granted that it
would give no such commitment. Certainly, the evidence provides no basis for
thinking that, had the subject been raised, the City would have said anything
to the effect of: “Of course, we will not down‑zone; we need not trouble
to say that, it is too clear.”
I do not see how the Court of Appeal could find that the zoning was
a valid condition precedent and conclude, at the same time, that the
municipality could unilaterally cancel it with impunity.
82
The trial judge’s conclusion that the SMA contained the implied term not
to rezone for a reasonable time is supported by an analysis of the agreement
itself and the relevant external documentary evidence. Hence, with respect to
my colleague, it is not “a purely discretionary exercise of judicial power” but
one based on the evidence in this case.
83
At the outset, it is important to recognize that the express terms of
the purchase agreement between PNI and the British Columbia Enterprise
Corporation (“BCEC”), under which PNI subsumed BCEC’s rights in the SMA,
demonstrate the centrality and importance of the zoning from PNI’s
perspective. In the very first page of the offer/agreement for sale, Clause
2.01 explains that PNI’s obligation to purchase is conditional on zoning (as
well as on the park dedication, a service agreement and formal subdivision approval):
The acceptance of this Offer by the Purchaser as
herein provided shall convert this Offer into a binding agreement
. . . for the sale and purchase of the Lands on the terms and
conditions herein contained, including the Conditions Precedent and the
Purchaser’s Condition contained in Section 5 thereof.
The
purchaser’s condition, in Clause 5.01, confirms that there is no agreement if
the zoning is not in place:
This Offer and, if accepted, this Agreement is
subject to the satisfaction of the Conditions Precedent that:
(a) the Lands have been rezoned in
accordance with the Zoning Plan on or before February 1, 1988;
. . .
These Conditions Precedent may not be waived unilaterally by either
party. If for any reason whatsoever any of the Conditions Precedent are not
fully satisfied on or before February 1, 1988, the Initial Deposit, without
interest, shall be returned immediately to the Purchaser without deduction and
thereafter this Agreement shall be null and void and neither party shall have
any further obligation to the other in respect of this Agreement.
84
The purchase agreement concluded between BCEC and PNI was the fruit of
the City’s acceptance that BCEC would sell the development rights of the Phase
II lands to a third party. Article 13 of the SMA, entitled “Assignment or Sale
by B.C. Enterprise”, documents the City’s understanding that BCEC would
eventually sell the development rights to the land:
13. B.C. Enterprise covenants and agrees that
if it enters into an agreement to sell or convey all or a portion of the lands
that are or will be subject to a registration of a restrictive covenant in
accordance with this agreement, B.C. Enterprise shall obligate the purchaser in
such agreement to enter into an agreement with the City to observe, keep and
perform all of the covenants, conditions and obligations of B.C. Enterprise
contained herein insofar as the same apply to the said lands being sold by B.C.
Enterprise to such purchaser, and in the event of such sale being completed,
the purchaser shall be entitled to all the rights, privileges and benefits of
B.C. Enterprise contained herein insofar as they affect the lands purchased by
such purchaser. [Emphasis added.]
Article 5 of
the SMA, entitled “Subdivision Plan Approval”, specifically states that the
BCEC intends to develop the lands in phases, “subject to rezoning being
completed in accordance with Article 11” (emphasis added). When viewed
together, Articles 5, 11 and 13 of the SMA reveal the City’s intention to
maintain the zoning through any sale of the Phase II lands. This is not
surprising since, as the trial judge found at para. 33, it is quite apparent
that zoning was an essential pre-condition of the SMA:
The master agreement dealt with zoning as a
condition precedent. If the City failed to adopt the zoning contemplated for
the development the master agreement was simply unenforceable. The City did
adopt the zoning, the other conditions precedent were satisfied, and the master
agreement was then binding on the parties.
Thus, the very
wording of the SMA supports the trial judge’s finding that the City understood
that PNI’s investment was premised on the belief that the zoning would remain
undisturbed for a reasonable period of time. It would be contrary to business
sense and to all obligations of fairness to conclude that the condition
precedent regarding zoning had to be met but was not protected in any way from
unilateral retraction.
85
Evidence outside of the express terms of the contract also supports the
implied term. In particular, the City’s letter explaining the SMA to the town
of Whistler illustrates the City’s view on the agreement. The City stated that
the SMA was
designed to facilitate an unusual rezoning of a large area.
. . . The developer . . . wished to have a large area
. . . rezoned all at once and to proceed with subdivision in several
stages over a period of 10 or 12 years without having to rezone the property at
each stage.
In this
letter, the City recognized that the developer would need 10 to 12 years to
finish the project, and therefore, by implication, that the zoning must remain
in place for that period.
86
The Court of Appeal relied on a pre-contractual memorandum written in
1986 by the solicitor of British Columbia Place, the predecessor to BCEC who
assigned the development rights to PNI. With respect, little can be gleaned
from the passage pointed to:
It must be remembered and kept in mind that the City ALWAYS has final
control because if [the developer] proceed[s] on tangents not acceptable to it,
the City can always bring the total development to a halt by down-zoning the
whole area.
The letter
suggests that the City’s general power to down-zone has been restricted to a
situation where the development is not proceeding as planned, or on tangents,
and in this manner, acknowledges that it must respect its promise not to rezone
for a reasonable time. This provision is consistent with the understanding the
parties had all along, that the contract could not remove the City’s ability to
exercise its legislative discretion to down-zone. It does not shed light on
the crucial issue of the effect of such a decision. Contrary to suggestions
otherwise, the passage does not state that the original developer accepted the
risk of a decision to down-zone based on issues unrelated to satisfaction with
the progress of the development.
87
The conclusion that the contract contains the implied term is evident
from all of the circumstances in this case. Indeed, even counsel for the City
made concessions on this point during oral argument. When questioned, counsel
for the City acknowledged that if the City had not maintained the zoning for a
reasonable time, PNI might have attempted to quash the rezoning by-law under
the bad faith provision, Municipal Act, R.S.B.C. 1979, c. 290, s. 313
(which PNI has chosen not to do in this proceeding). The City quite properly
conceded that if it had rezoned without allowing PNI reasonable time to
complete the project (in their view five years, or at least until a new council
was elected), this might have demonstrated that it had acted in bad faith.
While counsel stopped short of conceding that the bad faith argument open to
PNI would be based on the fact that it was assumed by the parties that the
zoning would remain in place for a reasonable time, this must be inferred from
his position. The trial judge’s finding that PNI had not slept on its rights
but had acted with reasonable dispatch is unassailable.
88
To summarize, it is clear that the parties did not agree to a bare term
preventing the City from down-zoning, since it is acknowledged that they were
cognizant of the rule against binding future councils. Rather, the parties
carefully arranged the contract, as described by the trial judge (at para. 26),
as “an innovative means of achieving the parties’ differing objectives by
hinging binding obligations on each piece going into place”. The implied term
must be present to give the contract business efficacy. In view of the
condition precedent in the contract, an officious bystander would necessarily
hold the view that the City believed it would owe compensation in the event it
down-zoned without the passage of a reasonable time. The alternative infuses
the parties with an intention to give the City, as long as it was acting under
the rubric of the “public interest”, the power to unilaterally, and with
impunity, change the zoning immediately after the purchaser paid for the land,
depriving him substantially of the benefit of the contract. This cannot have
been the parties’ intention and this Court should not sanction this type of
unprincipled immunity.
Issue #2:
Is the Implied Term Ultra Vires?
89
It is accepted that the City cannot be held liable for breaching a term
that is ultra vires. An ultra vires term can be defined as a
term entered into by statutory bodies outside the limits of authority granted
or established by statute. As put in I. M. Rogers, The
Law of Canadian Municipal Corporations (2nd ed. (loose-leaf)), vol. 1, at
para. 63.34:
If there is no legislative authority, express or implied, vested in the
[Municipal] corporation to deal with the subject matter, then the by-law,
resolution or other act is beyond its powers and is a nullity.
90
This Court recently reaffirmed the sources of municipal power in Nanaimo
(City) v. Rascal Trucking Ltd., [2000] 1 S.C.R. 342, 2000 SCC 13, at para.
17, adopting the formulation set out in R. v. Sharma, [1993] 1 S.C.R.
650, at p. 668:
. . . as statutory bodies, municipalities “may exercise only
those powers expressly conferred by statute, those powers necessarily or fairly
implied by the expressed power in the statute, and those indispensable powers
essential and not merely convenient to the effectuation of the purposes of the
corporation”.
In Nanaimo,
the Court confirmed that a broad, purposive and reasonable approach is to be
taken when discerning the scope of municipal power. This, I note, is not a recent
development. In Rogers, supra, at para. 63.34, it is stated that
. . . the doctrine of ultra vires is to be applied
reasonably and whatever may be regarded as being incidental to the things which
are authorized by the legislature is not, in the absence of an express
prohibition, ultra vires. Thus, the rule of implied powers has, to some
extent, limited the scope of the doctrine.
As the
following will demonstrate, there exists a solid statutory basis that grounds
the City’s authority to agree to the implied term in the SMA.
91
This Court applied the ultra vires doctrine in The King v.
Dominion of Canada Postage Stamp Vending Co., [1930] S.C.R. 500, where the
respondent had been granted an exclusive license to sell stamps for 20 years.
The Court upheld the Postmaster’s termination of the agreement since s. 77 of
the Post Office Act, R.S.C. 1927, c. 161, stipulated that: “No contract
shall be entered into for a longer term than four years” (p. 505). The
contract clearly contradicted the statute and was held invalid, as the
Postmaster could “constitutionally and validly depute the performance of his
duties, only so far as authorized by Parliament” (p. 506). The contract here
does not violate any provision of the B.C. Act and this case is easily
distinguished.
92
That brings us to the question of whether, in the instant appeal,
the implied term is intra vires the City. In my opinion, the City was
authorized to enter the SMA and agree to the implied term under the general
business and contracting power of municipalities. At its lowest, the parties
agree that this power allows a council to bind future councils to a long-term
contract “where such a contract is made in the exercise of its proprietary or
business powers” (Rogers, supra, vol. 2, at para. 199.4). The scope of the general power to contract is quite broad (Rogers,
supra, vol. 2, at para. 197.1):
Apart from statutory restrictions
and prohibitions, the general rule is that municipal corporations, like private
corporations, have a general power to contract in furtherance of their
corporate objects, but where the corporation is of statutory origin its
contractual powers are limited and circumscribed by its constituent Act.
It is important to emphasize that in the instant appeal, there is no
statutory provision which specifically excludes the trading of zoning for
amenities from the general power to contract.
93
I also rely on the fact that in B.C., under s. 19(1) of the Municipal
Act, municipalities have the express power “to contract for materials and
services”. This is a wide and general municipal power, which should be
interpreted broadly; see R. v. Greenbaum, [1993] 1 S.C.R. 674, and my
colleague’s reasons, at para. 35. Moreover, when viewed in combination with s.
287 of the Act, s. 19 effectively grants to municipalities all powers
incidental or conducive to the exercise of the general power to contract for
materials and services. Section 287 states:
The council, in addition to powers specifically allotted to it, has the
power to do anything incidental or conducive to the exercise of an allotted
power.
94
While the courts of British Columbia have had little opportunity to
interpret s. 19(1), there is precedent which suggests that this section is the
statutory basis that grounds the municipal authority to enter development
agreements with zoning commitments. In Kendrick v. Nelson (City)
(1997), 31 B.C.L.R. (3d) 134 (S.C.), the City of Nelson entered a waterfront
development agreement with a developer to build a hotel/marina. As well as
agreeing to construct a dyke and a pathway at its own expense, the city agreed
to “undertake to provide development permit approval based on meeting all the
requirements of the development permit process which shall not exceed a maximum
of four weeks from the date of application” and to “undertake to provide all
the applicable zoning for the development” (para. 16). The zoning in question
was already in place; the city’s undertaking was to maintain it for the period
necessary to carry out the development plan. A group of citizens challenged
the city’s authority to enter the agreement on the basis that it offended s.
292 which prevented the city from assisting a developer. After describing the
agreement as “a complex exercise in allocating responsibilities with a
co-ordinated approach to the overall waterfront development” (para. 64), McEwan
J. recognized that the “municipality exercise[d] its power to contract under S.
19 to effect purposes that are clearly within the realm of public policy”
(para. 65).
95
While the statutory scheme had obviously changed by 1995, Nelson,
supra, supports the view that s. 19 authorizes municipalities to enter
development agreements in which they provide zoning commitments. As with the
SMA, the agreement at issue in Nelson was “an attempt to accommodate a
waterfront development that includes public uses and a private business there
was a public interest in promoting as part of an overall plan to enhance the
economic viability and diversity of the City” (para. 55). Where these types of
development agreements do not restrict the City from rezoning, they are not ultra
vires. The SMA, which simply contemplates compensation in the event of
rezoning, falls within the scope of this rule.
96
In light of the foregoing, I cannot accept the City’s position on this
issue. The City properly concedes that the SMA was lawful, agreeing that its
subject matter was within the City’s jurisdiction. Further, it acknowledges
that before 1978 and after 1993, the Municipal Act clearly provided for
this power. However, based on the “legislative history of zoning provisions in
B.C.”, it contends that during the relevant time period, the City did not have
the authority to agree to the implied term that would maintain zoning. More
specifically, in contrast to the current trend in municipal law, it argues that
its general power to contract should be interpreted narrowly, based exclusively
on the fact that, when the SMA was negotiated, municipalities were not
expressly authorized to enter land use contracts.
97
With respect to the contrary view, this argument does not carry the City
very far. A review of the legislative debates of the Municipal Amendment
Act, 1977, S.B.C. 1977, c. 57, demonstrates that the legislature of British
Columbia had no intention of removing the municipalities’ authority to enter
long-term planning contracts when it repealed the land use contract
provisions. The reason for the amendment was not that the government objected
to the municipalities having a tool to control long-term developments, but to
the intricacies of the provisions themselves, which had caused the land use
contract to become “an often confusing counterproductive roadblock” (Debates
of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia, vol. 6, August 8, 1977, at
p. 4353). Specifically, councils had been abusing the provisions in effect to
raise revenue, by using the land use contract to extract additional concessions
from developers. The motive behind the repeal of the land use contract was
entirely based on the fact that it was being used in an arbitrary and
unintended manner and as a substitute for zoning.
98
In my view, the review of the history of zoning power in B.C. confirms
that in 1987, the City had the power to agree to the term that the City would
not rezone for a reasonable time. In 1987, the basic zoning provision was s.
963 of the Municipal Act (now R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 323, s. 903), which gave
municipalities jurisdiction to enact zoning by-laws. That provision read:
963. (1) A local government may, by bylaw,
(a) divide the whole or part of the
municipality or regional district, as the case may be, into zones, name each
zone and show by map or describe by legal description the boundaries of the
zones,
(b) limit the vertical extent of a zone and
provide other zones above or below it, and
(c) regulate within the zones
(i) the use of land, buildings and
structures,
(ii) the density of the use of land,
buildings and structures, and
(iii) the siting, size and dimensions of
(A) buildings and structures, and
(B) uses that are permitted on the land, and
(d) regulate the shape, dimensions and area,
including the establishment of minimum and maximum sizes, of all parcels of
land that may be created by subdivision, and
(i) the regulations may be different for
different areas, and
(ii) the boundaries of those areas need not
be the same as the boundaries of zones created under subsection 1(a).
(2) The regulations under subsection (1) may be
different for different
(a) zones,
(b) uses within a zone,
(c) standards of works and services provided, and
(d) siting circumstances
as specified in the bylaw.
(3) The power to regulate under subsection (1)
includes the power to prohibit any use or uses in any zone or zones. [Emphasis
added.]
99
As is evident, the municipality’s express powers included the power to
create zones, and to regulate land use within the zones. It did not, as noted
by my colleague, include the power, formerly granted under s. 702A of the Municipal
Act, R.S.B.C. 1960, c. 255 (as am. by S.B.C. 1971, c. 38, s. 52), to enter
land use contracts that froze zoning “notwithstanding any by-law of the
municipality”. The relevant part of s. 702A read:
702A. . . .
(3) Upon the application of an owner of land within
the development area, or his agent, the Council may by by-law, notwithstanding
any by-law of the municipality, or section 712 or 713, enter into a land use
contract containing such terms and conditions for the use and development of
the land as may be mutually agreed upon, and thereafter the use and
development of the land shall, notwithstanding any by-law of the municipality,
or section 712 or 713, be in accordance with the land use contract.
(4) A contract entered into under subsection (3)
shall have the force and effect of a restrictive covenant running with the land
and shall be registered in the Land Registry Office by the municipality.
[Emphasis added.]
I cannot agree
with my colleague that the absence of s. 702A in 1987 demonstrates that the
City lacked the authority to agree to maintain the zoning bargained for in a
lawful contract. The primary purpose of s. 702A was to force the City to
honour land use contracts by effectively granting the developer an acquired
right to proceed with a development (including those not yet begun at the time
of the change in the zoning), enforceable by specific performance. It
is important to emphasize that the absence of the provision does not
demonstrate that the City lacked the authority to honour a lawfully entered
contract in some other form; this is significant since PNI is not seeking the
remedy of specific performance. While the City was no longer forced to allow
development projects to proceed, the repeal of s. 702A did not signify that it
gained the power to exercise the discretion to rezone, in violation of a lawful
contract, with no consequences; see Wells v. Newfoundland, [1999]
3 S.C.R. 199.
100
By repealing s. 702A, the B.C. government did not prevent the City from
entering long-term development contracts; it simply removed the right of
municipalities to enter contracts where specific performance was guaranteed (s.
13(3) of the Municipal Amendment Act, 1977). The repeal did not end existing
land use contracts; see Re Cressey Development Corp. and Township of
Richmond (1982), 132 D.L.R. (3d) 166 (B.C.C.A.), and s. 982 of the Municipal
Act, which acknowledged, by creating a process for their amendment, that
existing land use contracts would continue in force:
982. . . .
(2) Subject to subsections (3) and (5), a land use
contract that is entered into and registered in a land title office may be
amended
(a) by bylaw . . ., or
(b) by a development variance permit issued
under section 974 or a development permit under section 976.
101
It must be recognized that the repeal of the land use contract system
did not remove the authority of municipalities to bind themselves in regard to
zoning. When s. 702A was repealed by s. 13 of the Municipal Amendment Act,
1977, it was replaced with s. 702AA, which created a new development permit
system. The permit system did not statutorily restrict the municipality from
rezoning, as did the land use contract system. However, s. 980(5) was similar
in effect:
A local government may issue more than one permit
for an area of land, and the land shall be developed strictly in accordance
with the permit or permits issued, which shall also be binding on local
government.
102
This provision established that once a permit was issued it was “binding
on local government”. Despite my colleague’s assertion otherwise, in my view
this confirms the authority of the City “to constrain the future use of this
legislative power”. Moreover, s. 702AA(8) confirms the binding nature of the
permit: “If a development permit is issued, the land shall be developed
strictly in accordance with the terms, conditions and provisions of the
permit.”
103
As stated by the Minister of Municipal Affairs during second reading of
the Municipal Amendment Act, 1977 when the government repealed land use
contracts and introduced development permits, it did not intend to remove the
authority of municipalities to control exceptional types of developments (Debates
of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia, supra, at p. 4354):
The development permit represents much more than a
response against the land-use contract. Its introduction will accomplish several
important reforms. First, it defines and confirms the municipality’s right to
control the qualitative aspects of the exceptional development. . . .
The Minister’s
remarks confirm that the principle behind repealing land use contracts and
substituting development permits was to ensure that developers received an
easier, quicker treatment from councils who had previously abused the land use
contract. The intent was not, as my colleague suggests, to remove the
authority of municipalities to control their planning needs by way of
contract. The fact that no development permit was issued in this case is not
evidence of the scope of the municipality’s power to contract for zoning during
the relevant time period. Accordingly, it has no bearing on the authority of
the City to enter into the SMA.
104
To summarize, the general municipal power to contract in furtherance of
municipal objectives is a solid basis for the City’s authority to agree to the
zoning commitments in the SMA. As stated in Rogers, supra, vol. 2, at
para. 197.1:
There is no principle of law enabling a court to prevent a council from
making any contract it sees fit to make with respect to a matter within its
jurisdiction (Independent Cdn. Business Assn. v. Vancouver (1988), 24
B.C.L.R. (2d) 96 (C.A.)).
Section 19(1)
and s. 963 (read in conjunction with s. 287) establish that the subject matter
of the implied term in the SMA was within the City’s jurisdiction. The express
power to contract for materials and services, coupled with the municipality’s
power to zone, provided the City with the authority to agree to a contract that
contained a term which temporarily maintains zoning; see Kendrick, supra.
Even if the authorization did not flow directly from these provisions, this
power would necessarily or fairly be implied under these express powers.
Finally, and perhaps most telling, is the fact that, in argument, the City
conceded the SMA was lawful despite being unable to identify a specific
statutory basis which granted it the authority to enter into this type of
contract. Aside from the fact that it is inconsistent to assert that only the
implied term is ultra vires, in my view, the statutory basis is the one
that I have just identified and, properly interpreted, it extends to the City’s
agreement to maintain the zoning. While this disposes of the ultra vires
issue, three additional points bear comment.
105
First, the City suggests that s. 972(1) of the Municipal Act
which provides that no compensation is payable to any person for reduced land
values due to changes in zoning supports its position that no remedy is
available for breach of contract in this case. I think the purpose and effect
of s. 972(1) are entirely unrelated to the issue before us. Section 972(1)
states:
972. (1) Compensation is not payable to any
person for any reduction in the value of that person’s interest in land, or for
any loss or damages that result from the adoption of an official community
plan, a rural land use bylaw or a bylaw under this Division or the issue of a
permit under Division (5).
The statutory
scheme demonstrates that s. 972(1) provides immunity to the City for decisions
to down-zone simpliciter; it does not prevent recovery for rezoning in
breach of a contract. The subsection was introduced in 1985 by the Municipal
Amendment Act, 1985, S.B.C. 1985, c. 79, s. 8, at the same time as s.
980(5) which established that development permits were binding on the City. If
s. 972(1) covered every decision to down-zone, s. 980(5) would have no purpose
as the former provision would remove the availability of a remedy if the City
did not honour a binding permit. It is plain that the only way to interpret
these provisions together as part of the same scheme is to realize that s.
972(1) allows municipalities to make routine zoning decisions with impunity and
that the balance of the provisions, which demonstrate the legislative policy of
allowing a municipality to bind itself, continue to have meaning. Here, PNI is
not demanding compensation only “because the City exercised its legislative
powers in a particular way” (LeBel J., at para. 64). It is suing because the
City chose to do so in breach of contract.
106
Second, my colleague asserts that specific provisions in force in the
relevant time period restricting the power of municipalities to enter into
contracts of a duration exceeding five years reveal that the Province
contemplated a regime where long term contracts were closely controlled. I, on
the other hand, believe that limiting the duration of contracts in specific
instances is indicative of the fact that no restrictions were contemplated
generally. In my view, these provisions do not justify a restrictive
interpretation of the City’s powers and are of little significance in this
appeal. The City concedes that the long-term development contract at issue in
this appeal, the SMA, is lawful.
107
Third, I find it necessary to comment on the Court of Appeal’s approach
to the ultra vires issue. The Court of Appeal preferred not to rely on
the ultra vires doctrine in finding for the City, but did express doubt
that it would be “intra vires a municipal corporation to expressly
contract not to down-zone” (para. 41). To reach that position, it relied on
the following statement by Sopinka J. in Shell Canada Products Ltd. v.
Vancouver (City), [1994] 1 S.C.R. 231, at pp. 276-77:
In most cases, as here, the problem arises with
respect to the exercise of a power that is not expressly conferred but is
sought to be implied on the basis of a general grant of power. It is in these
cases that the purposes of the enabling statute assume great importance. The
approach in such circumstances is set out in the following excerpt in Rogers, The
Law of Canadian Municipal Corporations, supra, § 64.1, at p. 387,
with which I agree:
In approaching a problem of construing a municipal
enactment a court should endeavour firstly to interpret it so that the powers
sought to be exercised are in consonance with the purposes of the corporation.
The provision at hand should be construed with reference to the object of the
municipality: to render services to a group of persons in a locality with a
view to advancing their health, welfare, safety and good government.
Any ambiguity or doubt is to be resolved in favour of the citizen
especially when the grant of power contended for is out of the “usual range”.
See Rogers, supra, at § 64.1, and Re Taylor and the City of Winnipeg
(1896), 11 Man. R. 420, per Taylor C.J.
108
To begin with, the Court of Appeal did not consider the last direction
that any doubt is to be resolved in favour of the citizen. More importantly, I
do not agree with the Court of Appeal’s assessment that the significance of Shell
to the instant appeal is “that the majority adopted a narrow approach to the
definition of powers not expressly conferred but sought to be implied on the
basis of a general grant of power” (para. 34). The conclusion of the majority
in Shell was prompted by their key finding (at p. 280) that the
purpose of the Resolutions is to affect matters beyond the boundaries
of the City without any identifiable benefit to its inhabitants. This is a
purpose that is neither expressly nor impliedly authorized by the Vancouver
Charter and is unrelated to the carrying into effect of the intent and
purpose of the Vancouver Charter.
Quite clearly,
the principal holding in Shell was that the municipality was not acting
for a municipal purpose, and not that a municipality’s implied powers should be
narrowly construed. Shell merely confirms that a municipality must act
for an appropriate purpose, and where it does not, its action will be ultra
vires. Here, the power sought to be exercised (to contract for long-term
development) accords with the purposes of the corporation.
109
The Court of Appeal’s position on the ultra vires issue was
largely based on its finding that it is “most doubtful that the City has the
power to contractually bind itself to do that which, by settled law, it is
forbidden to do” (para. 38). With the greatest respect, the premise, and
therefore the conclusion, is incorrect: the agreement to maintain zoning is
not forbidden by settled law. Under the contract, as required, the City
retained its power to modify the zoning but it remained liable for civil
consequences if it breached its contractual obligations. The following
explains that the City’s commitment to the zoning does not violate public
policy.
Issue #3:
Is It Contrary to Public Policy to Enforce the Implied Term?
110
The final question in this appeal is whether the well established rule
accepted by both parties that City Council does not have the authority to
fetter the ability of a future council to exercise its legislative power is
violated by the implied term at issue. In my view, it does not and the implied
term is not void for public policy.
111
I agree that a limitation on a municipality’s legislative power is not a
trivial matter: but the fact is that the SMA does not restrict the City’s
authority to rezone. This is not a case where the municipality has given up
its legislative powers. Thus, my colleague’s assertion that municipalities
“cannot agree to change zoning in return for particular consideration, and they
cannot agree to keep zoning unchanged in return for particular consideration”
(para. 57) overlooks the existence of the contract that is at the heart of this
dispute. On the former point, the City concedes that the SMA, which was
conditional on rezoning, was lawful. The latter point is the very issue to be
settled in this appeal.
112
In finding that the implied term limited the Council’s discretion to
rezone and was therefore contrary to public policy, the Court of Appeal relied
on Vancouver v. Registrar Vancouver Land Registration District, [1955] 2
D.L.R. 709 (B.C.C.A.), and Ingledew’s Ltd. v. City of Vancouver (1967),
61 D.L.R. (2d) 41 (B.C.S.C.), to support its view that requiring council to
consider liability for damages fetters legislative discretion. I cannot agree
with this proposition and do not find that those cases provide it with a solid
foundation.
113
In Vancouver v. Registrar Vancouver Land Registration District, supra,
the city entered into a contract with the aim of rezoning certain land in the
City of Vancouver from a three-storey multiple dwelling zone to a six-storey
light industrial zone. The city gave an unqualified covenant to rezone the
land (upon due registration of its rights under the Land Registry Act,
R.S.B.C. 1948, c. 171) in exchange for a promise from the owners to refrain
from building on the northern most edge of the property and to landscape it.
The city applied to register these charges against the land, but the Registrar
refused because, in his view, there was no registrable interest. The majority
of the Court of Appeal decided that it was unnecessary to analyze the
objections made by the Registrar since it found that the agreement was ex
facie invalid. The problem with the agreement was that the city had
fettered its legislative discretion by agreeing to pass a by-law (at p. 712):
With these observations, I turn now to the
invalidity of the agreement. That lies in the fact that by cl. 11 of the
agreement, the City bound itself without reservation or qualification, to pass
the amending by-law effecting the proposed re-zoning upon due registration of
the City’s rights under the agreement. By so doing the City bound itself, and
thereby the council (through whom it must act) to disregard all objections to
its passage, though the objectors had the statutory right to have their
objections considered and determined upon their merits when the by-law was
presented for hearing. The agreement impaired the discretion vested in the
council by the Town Planning Act for the protection of the competing and
conflicting interests of property owners affected by the proposed amending
by-law and the interests of the community as a whole.
114
The agreement in Vancouver v. Registrar Vancouver Land
Registration District required the city to act in a manner that violated
its statutory commitments (i.e., a neutral assessment of the public interest
through public hearings could not be conducted), and consequently embarrassed
the legislative process. That distinguishes it (and its progeny, including Ingledew’s,
supra) from the present appeal, where the City did not bind itself to
pass a by-law but merely agreed to honour its contractual commitments. There
is a valid distinction in, on the one hand, committing indelibly to pass a
zoning by-law, and, on the other, agreeing to compensate if the basic by-law
which is a condition precedent to the contract is repealed. This latter
promise is less restrictive, does not offend the public interest and does not
embarrass the legislative process. There is no danger that Council will be
placed in the awkward position of compulsorily pushing through a by-law while
conducting sham public hearings. Here, the City merely accepted that the
passing of a by-law would be a condition precedent to the contract. There was
never any obligation to pass the by-law.
115
In my view, there is a distinction between preventing council from
exercising its legislative discretion and requiring it to consider its
contractual obligations before exercising that discretion. The case law
upholds such a distinction. In the recent decision of Wells, supra,
this Court recognized, at para. 43, a similar distinction
between the respondent’s right to hold office as a Commissioner, and
his right to the financial benefits of having agreed to serve in that
capacity. While the legislature is free to remove the power and responsibility
of the office, in doing so it does not strip the respondent of the compensation
flowing from the contract unless it specifically so enacts.
116
The cases which my colleague asserts support the position that an
indirect fettering is illegal (Town of Eastview v. Roman Catholic Episcopal
Corporation of Ottawa (1918), 44 O.L.R. 284 (S.C., App. Div.), and Walker
v. Mayor of St. John (1872), 14 N.B.R. 143 (S.C.)) are easily
distinguished. In Eastview, the town council bound itself “to approve
and allow forever the use for cemetery purposes of the lands” and to “never
attempt to prevent or prohibit internment of the dead in said lands” (p. 288).
That permanent and absolute covenant is obviously a far cry from the City’s
temporary and reasonable promise to compensate PNI if it rezoned without giving
PNI a reasonable period to proceed with its development project. Similar
reasoning may apply to Walker.
117
The decision of the New Brunswick Supreme Court, Appeal Division in Attorney-General
for New Brunswick v. Saint John, [1948] 3 D.L.R. 693, points out the
significance between indirect and direct fettering of a municipal council’s
power. I cannot agree with my colleague that the ratio of this case is
unclear. In Saint John, the city gave the New Brunswick Power Co. the
right to operate buses in the city for a period of six years. The contract provided
that if city council in the first six years gave another company a franchise to
operate buses or compelled the Power Co. to end its operations, the city would
indemnify it against the capital loss arising from the initial purchase of the
buses. It was argued that the city had fettered its discretion to grant a
franchise to another entity because of the liability which it would incur to
the Power Co. under the contract. At p. 707, Harrison J. found that the
indemnification of the Power Co. was not ultra vires:
This clause in the agreement cannot therefore be
objected to because it creates a legal obstacle to the performance by the city
of its statutory duties. It is merely a question of good business, and as the
city were asking the Power Company to purchase motor buses and go to a large
expense in providing this equipment, the agreement to compensate the company,
should this service be discontinued by reason of the city’s action, does not
appear unreasonable.
The same
reasoning was adopted in First City Development Corp. v. Durham (Regional
Municipality) (1989), 41 M.P.L.R. 241 (Ont. H.C.), at p. 270, and is
consistent with English case law on the issue; see Stourcliffe Estates Co.
v. Bournemouth Corp., [1908-10] All E.R. 785 (C.A.); Dowty Boulton Paul
Ltd. v. Wolverhampton Corp., [1971] 2 All E.R. 277 (Ch. D.).
118
That reasoning must be applied here. The implied term is not a “legal
obstacle to the performance . . . of . . . statutory
duties”, but a “question of good business” (Saint John, supra, at
p. 707). The City asked PNI to involve itself in a complex, long-term
development agreement that was in the public interest. The developer was
forced to make a large capital expenditure at the outset. As in Saint John,
the “agreement to compensate the company, should this [contract] be
discontinued by reason of the city’s action, does not appear unreasonable” (p.
707). By distinguishing Saint John, the Court of Appeal in Vancouver
v. Registrar Vancouver Land Registration District accepted that a
contractual term which allows for damages in the event of a change of policy by
the City is not void per se for public policy. Saint John
recognizes that the City must respect vested rights and its contractual
obligations. Repudiating the consideration for the contract cannot, in my
opinion, be justified on the basis of public policy.
119
The finding that the implied term is not contrary to public policy is
consistent with the modern approach to Crown liability for breach of contract
as this Court recently set out in Wells, supra. I cannot agree
with my colleague that the situation here can be distinguished from Wells
because the SMA is not a business contract of a type similar to the one at
issue in that case. The artificial creation of categories of business
contracts is unjustified and unworkable. In Wells, this Court
recognized that the government cannot glibly avoid responsibility for breaches
of contract. Thus Wells, who had been a Commissioner with the Public Utilities
Board until he lost his job during government restructuring, was entitled to
damages for breach of contract. Our finding that the government of
Newfoundland had the authority to restructure the Board did not signify that
the legislature could act with impunity. Rather, we stated that in order to
avoid the legal consequences of breaching a contract, the Government had to use
clear and explicit statutory language to extinguish any existing rights
previously conferred to an individual. Wells’s right to seek damages for the
breach had not been removed by legislation, and consequently, he was entitled
to compensation. This is consistent with the conditions for municipal repeal
of vested rights; see Rogers, supra, vol. 1, at para. 83.23.
120
Wells identifies important matters of policy fundamental to the
analysis of the City’s liability in this case. At para. 46, the Court
recognized that in “a nation governed by the rule of law, we assume that the
government will honour its obligations unless it explicitly exercises its power
not to”. This reasoning applies equally here. The City argued that by passing
the down-zoning by-law and by completing the public hearings necessary to it,
it “explicitly exercise[d] its power” not to honour its obligation. However,
this argument suffers from the same weakness apparent in Wells:
although the government may act in a given manner, it is not relieved of
financial liability for the consequences of its breach. Paragraph 35 of Wells
demonstrates the direct parallel with the instant appeal:
While both the Crown and the respondent knew that
the Board could be altered or eliminated by legislative action [just as both
the City and PNI knew that the City could down-zone], there is no indication
that this was understood to jeopardize the respondent’s financial security.
121
Wells is strong recent support for PNI’s position. The important
policy considerations eloquently expressed by Major J. in Wells, at
para. 46, should be honoured here:
In the absence of a clear express intent to abrogate rights and
obligations – rights of the highest importance to the individual – those
rights remain in force. To argue the opposite is to say that the government is
bound only by its whim, not its word. In Canada this is unacceptable, and does
not accord with the nation’s understanding of the relationship between the
state and its citizens.
122
Contrary to my colleague’s assertion, a multitude of policy
considerations make it clear that a municipality should be held liable for
damages where its council acts in conflict with a contract entered into by a
previous council. The issue in this case is whether the City breached an
implied term of a development contract, but the question applies equally to all
contracts entered into by the City. Most council decisions have financial
implications which could be argued to indirectly fetter future councils.
123
It is quite apparent that requiring a municipal council to consider its
contractual obligations does not violate public policy but promotes the public
interest. Contracts entered into by a municipality should serve as checks on
the exercise of legislative discretion. Councils are free to legislate as they
like, but they cannot ignore the contractual obligations that they owe (Wells,
supra). Having such an indirect fetter does not subject the municipal
legislative process to undue influence or embarrassment. Moreover, the public
policy of society is reflected in its statutes (S. M. Waddams, The Law of
Contracts (3rd ed. 1993), at para. 554); hence, where a municipality enters
a contract that is intra vires, the court must act cautiously before
invalidating a term on the basis of public policy. The scope of the doctrine
must be constrained, since, after all, “most governmental functions are
performed under statutory powers”. Moreover, “[t]he Crown benefits no less
than private persons from the principle that contractual undertakings should be
reliable” (P. W. Hogg, Liability of the Crown (2nd ed. 1989), at p.
171). If municipalities are not held to their contractual obligations, their
impaired credit would cause them to pay higher prices for everything obtained
by contract.
124
My colleague argues that a council’s decision to rezone should not be
subject to “considerations other than an objective examination of what is best
for the community” (para. 64). In my view, where the City has entered a
contract and received consideration, the “community” includes the holder of
that contract. The vested rights of that individual cannot be ignored. It is
disingenuous to argue that this contract was breached in the public interest,
because, as pointed out in the hearing, it will always be in the community
interest to get something, in this case $2.5 million worth of amenities, for
nothing. Like Professor Hogg, I believe the public purse should bear the cost
of a change in public policy. There is no justification for a special public
law of contract (Hogg, supra, at pp. 171-72).
125
In contrast to my colleague, at para. 68 of his reasons, I do not think
it is good policy to include the risk of the unilateral cancellation of
contracts without compensation, under the guise of the public interest, as one
of the “special legal and political risks” developers must assume in dealing
with municipalities. Further, I am not persuaded that the consideration of
“faith and trust between the public and private sectors” will curb the exercise
of this power by municipalities. Certainly, the facts of this case demonstrate
otherwise; see also First City, supra.
126
To summarize, it is sound policy to allow municipalities to enter
complex, long-term development contracts which provide developers with a
promise that existing zoning will continue for a period sufficient to allow for
development. The power to contract with developers and provide enforceable
guarantees in return for the provision of infrastructure and amenities is
indispensable to the operation and growth of municipalities. This was
recognized in First City, supra, where Craig J. found that an
agreement between Durham and a developer was not contrary to public policy as, inter
alia, “[t]he region had decided that as a matter of good planning, and for
its own protection financially, that it was in the public interest” (p. 270).
127
I should note in passing that the doctrine that the Crown may not enter
into a contract that might fetter future councils has been criticized in the
literature. In describing it as “intolerably vague”, Hogg points out, at p.
171, that the doctrine unfairly provides the Crown with a means of escape from
many of its seemingly straightforward contractual obligations: “Since there is
no breach of contract, no damages have to be paid to the private contracting
party. This seems grossly unfair to the private contractor, who is forced to
bear the cost of a change in public policy that ought to be paid for by the
[public body].” In this case, there is no direct fettering of the
municipality’s legislative power and there is no reason to fear that the duty
to pay damages will affect in a detrimental way the public interest in
preserving the legislative independence of all municipal governments.
128
Finally, a review of the myriad of lower court decisions raised in this
case, which are based on their specific factual and statutory context, does not
sway support to the City’s position. As Smith J.A. noted in dissent in Vancouver
v. Registrar Vancouver Land Registration District, supra, at p. 710,
“old authorities should be applied with caution . . . objections,
often technical, should not be raised in frustration of reasonable measures
taken for the City’s development”. In any event, many of the cases support
PNI’s position. In Lawrason v. Town of Dundas (1920), 18 O.W.N. 22, the
court held that “a municipal council of one year is not bound by the contract
of the same council in a previous year is a proposition which has no merit but
that of novelty” (p. 23). Further, in Muskoka Mall Ltd. v. Town of
Huntsville (1977), 3 M.P.L.R. 279 (Ont. H.C.), it was held that the
municipality was bound by a development agreement and could not repudiate it by
repealing the zoning by-law permitting the development. A municipality must
respect vested rights acquired under a valid agreement with it, particularly if
the other party to the agreement has changed its position on the strength of
the contract. Moreover, Re Galt-Canadian Woodworking Machinery Ltd. and
City of Cambridge (1982), 135 D.L.R. (3d) 58 (Ont. Div. Ct.), aff’d (1983),
146 D.L.R. (3d) 768 (Ont. C.A.), supports the view that the indirect fettering
of legislative discretion by the potential liability for damages is permissible.
As long as the original decision to enter the contract is valid, as here, there
is nothing illegal or contrary to public policy.
129
In light of the above analysis, I conclude that the implied term does
not offend against public policy.
Disposition
130
For the above reasons, I conclude that the implied term is not ultra
vires or contrary to public policy. I would allow the appeal with costs
and remit the matter to the trial judge, to decide the quantum of damages for
breach of contract. As mentioned earlier in these reasons, I would dismiss the
cross-appeal.
Appeal dismissed with costs, Major,
Bastarache and Binnie JJ.
dissenting. Cross‑appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellant/respondent on cross‑appeal: Cox,
Taylor, Victoria.
Solicitors for the respondent/appellant on cross‑appeal: Staples
McDannold Stewart, Victoria.